nanog mailing list archives

Re: Network Storage


From: Andrew Thrift <andrew () networklabs co nz>
Date: Mon, 16 Apr 2012 11:43:23 +1200

If you want something from a Tier1 the new Dell R720XD's will take 24x 900GB SAS disks and have 16 cores. If you order it with a SAS6-HBA you can add up to 8 trays of 24 x 900GB SAS disks to provide 194TB of raw space at quite a reasonable cost.


Alternatively, you could have a couple of "probe" servers connected to some nice fast SAN backend with redundant controllers. This will provide failover at the probe and storage levels but will cost a fair bit more :)





Regards,






Andrew

On 16/04/2012 11:18 a.m., George Herbert wrote:
On Thu, Apr 12, 2012 at 3:19 PM, Jared Mauch<jared () puck nether net>  wrote:
You can also look at a machine like this:

http://www.supermicro.com/products/chassis/4U/417/SC417E16-R1400U.cfm

Jared Mauch

On Apr 12, 2012, at 5:47 PM, Matthew Luckie<mjl () luckie org nz>  wrote:

1) My goal is to store the traffic may be fore ever, and analyze it in
the future for security related incidents detected by ids/ips.
Take a look at "Building a Time Machine for Efficient Recording and
Retrieval of High-Volume Network Traffic"

https://www.usenix.org/conference/imc-05/building-time-machine-efficient-recording-and-retrieval-high-volume-network
Just FYI, it's somewhat of a tossup on large large arrays with 3.5"
and 2.5" models.  Equivalent 3.5" units hold 36-48 HDDs, and drive
sizes for enterprise SAS drives are 3 TB in 3.5" vs 1 TB in 2.5" now,
so you get more per box with 3.5" drives.  Also a lot cheaper in the
end.

About six months ago I purchased two similar boxes for nearline
backups purposes (lower bandwidth) with 3.5" drives; 34 x 3 TB plus a
couple of much faster 2.5" 15k boot drives,
post-RAID-10-and-hotspare-and-filesystem usable space was about 42 TB.
  About $22k each.  One can go somewhat cheaper than that but the VAR
had a good support story and "just fixed it" the next day when a RAID
card model didn't quite work out.




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