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the last word

Photography meets digital computer technology. Photography wins -- most of the time.

You are here: Home / The Bleeding Edge / Getting down to business with the Drobo FS

Getting down to business with the Drobo FS

April 30, 2010 JimK 5 Comments

I called Drobo customer support. Actually, I called Drobo sales, since there doesn’t seem to be a separate customer support operation. The salesperson was very helpful. He said that normally they tell customers with disk failures to go to the manufacturer for replacements, but, since I’d had four out of five fail, he’d call the distributor and have them arrange for a swap.

After two days, I haven’t heard from the disk distributor . Maybe next week. However, the big brown truck brought three spare 2 TB drives from Amazon. I pulled one of them out of its box and plugged it into the FS in the space of the most recently failed drive. After about a minute the Drobo was happy and gave me four green disk lights. I had already been loading data onto the array, so I continued.

I can now give you some performance numbers. Using fairly large (between 30 and 100 MB) files, and Vice Versa with the cyclic redundancy check turned on, the sustained transfer rate to the FS appears to average around 28 megabytes per second, or 220 megabits per second. This is only slightly better than the performance that I’ve observed on the USB-connected Drobos. With shorter files, things get worse. We can’t blame the Drobo for all of this; I usually see performance about half again faster with server-to-server transfers over gigabit Ethernet.

As an aside, it seems to be a sad verity that local area network transfers operate at about 1/3 the raw speed of the media. I remember, more than 20 years ago, been disappointed that Ethernet transfers over the 10 megabit per second links of the late eighties, seem to top out at about three megabits per second even if other traffic on the network was minimal. Now, even with switches rather than contention devices mediating the transfers, the ratio hasn’t changed. I blame this on a continuing reluctance of system designers to offload the computationally intensive portions of the protocol stack to dedicated devices.

It’s interesting that transfers of really big files, like operating system partition images, proceed at a average rate substantially lower than that of 100 MB files, and that the rate varies widely over time. I don’t have an explanation for this. In previous conversations with the Drobo support staff they have mention that the Drobo firmware looks at the file characteristics and optimizes the disk layout accordingly. It may be that the processing necessary for long files uses up a lot of cycles in the Drobo processor.

During my initial setup of the Drobo FS, I found that there was no way in the Dashboard to join the Drobo to the Windows domain. I asked the tech about that. He said that the Drobo FS could not be part of Active Directory, even though various windows server operating systems were listed as being compatible. This was a surprise to me; I have not been able to find it explicated anywhere on the Drobo web site. My previous experience with network attached storage devices was with various Buffalo boxes; they all had pretensions of being Active Directory compatible, even if in practice they were somewhat balky.

 

The Bleeding Edge

← Another Drobo hard disk failure Drobo FS: are those disks really bad? →

Comments

  1. badbob001 says

    April 30, 2010 at 6:28 pm

    If you’re going through a server, you might as well get a DAS like the Drobo S to get better performance.

    Reply
  2. Jim says

    April 30, 2010 at 8:07 pm

    You are absolutely right. When I bought the FS, I didn’t understand its lack of compatibility with Active Directory. Had I known, I’d have gotten the S. Going through the server is just making the best of a less-then-perfect situation.

    Jim

    Reply
  3. Allen says

    May 22, 2010 at 9:46 pm

    There’s a 30-day return policy, I believe. If you aren’t satisfied…better get an RMA quickly if you want the S (if there’s still time).

    Reply
  4. Jim says

    May 23, 2010 at 6:53 am

    Good point. Too busy to swap it out now. Inertia: a terrible thing…

    Jim

    Reply

Trackbacks

  1. Synology DS1511+ OOBE | The Last Word says:
    March 2, 2012 at 2:31 pm

    […] After the swap, the FS seemed to come up, but none of the Dashboards could see it. I shut it down the “wrong” way again, restarted it, and all was well. At least, all was well with the FS, but not with me. The experience left a bad taste in my mouth. I’d have more tolerance if the Drobos in general, and the FS in particular, had been reliable up to now. That’s not been the case. Anyone with a long memory who’s been following this blog knows what I mean. The rest of you can look here, and here, and here. […]

    Reply

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