I agree. There are two major items that hold us back from selling more Linux solutions. One is the lack of Linux Compatible Groupware (with all of the bells and whistles of Exchange) and the other is lack of hardware RAID compatibility. Any comments on either of these would be helpful! Carl Mayer Revolutionary Business Concepts (RBC), Inc. mailto:cmayer@revbiz.com 913-385-5700 Fax 913-385-5701 http://www.revbiz.com -----Original Message----- From: owner-kclug@marauder.transwarp.net [mailto:owner-kclug@marauder.transwarp.net]On Behalf Of mike neuliep Sent: Tuesday, September 14, 1999 9:06 AM To: kclug@kclug.org Subject: kclug - Raid 5 Experiences This weekend I moved the kclug machine over to a slightly better box, as well as upgrading sendmail. This caused some minor problems with the list, which if you are reading this message, have since been corrected. The new box is a dual P166 with 256 meg of ram. Also installed is an American Megatrends Raid 5 428 series controller. This is a caching hardware raid 5 controller that is supported by Linux. It is also fairly cheap compared to the other supported cards under the 2.0.37 kernel. The AMI card was $100 and comparable Mylex and Compaq cards ranged inbetween $450-$800. Under NT the card should be considered a steal, because you can reconfigure the array on the fly. The only card you can do this with in Linux is the Mylex DAC960 series of cards. Rebuild on the fly is supported by the card and has been tested with this machine. With two hotspares, I shouldn't have any drive problems. I'd like to hear about others on the list that are doing different hardware raid levels on Linux. Mike Neuliep mike@illiana.net