Poznámka
Přístup k této stránce vyžaduje autorizaci. Můžete se zkusit přihlásit nebo změnit adresáře.
Přístup k této stránce vyžaduje autorizaci. Můžete zkusit změnit adresáře.
To bring you up to speed, I’ve loaded the preview of Windows Server 2012 R2 and built an extremely low cost storage subsystem out using a USB hub, some memory sticks, and USB attached SATA drives detailed in earlier posts. This is all in an effort to give you and me a look at the new tiered storage feature that is part of Storage Spaces within Windows Server 2012 R2.
My goals for this effort are:
- Provide a walk through of Storage Spaces – I’m stunned how many admins haven’t had a chance to look at it or use it
- Show how to integrate SSDs (or my case fast memory sticks) into a storage pool
- Demonstrate the potential performance gain of using a mix of storage technologies, with the tools included in Windows
Somewhat Unscientific Methodology
I don’t have an unlimited budget, or unlimited time, so my initial testing was somewhat limited.
I’m using a laptop with USB 3.0 that has two physical (SSD) drives in it, with the additional external drives attached via USB 3.0. For fun I’ve included a Powershell listing of the drives (using get-physicaldisk):
Disk2 and Disk3 are 32GB USB 3.0 flash sticks, with the other disk (Disk4-7) being USB 3.0 attached SATA disk I salvaged from old laptops and what not.
For testing, the first step was to create a “baseline” environment to act as a control. I configured one of the four spinning disks (Disk4) as a standalone to perform the same copy tests I would use on the Storage Spaces volumes.
Now I’ll move on to how I configured the volume in Storage Spaces.
-John