0

This is the first time I've really dug into PMMs (Intel Optane), so bear with me if I'm a little slow on the uptake.  It looks like you can configure these in either cache- or disk-mode, depending on your system.  As one who wants to add disk-mode PMMs to their environment but has concerns about redundancy, what happens in the event of a PMM failure?  It seems as though there's no way to set up something akin to a hardware RAID for PMMs, but is there any other way to get redundancy at the hardware level?  The only options I've found are software-based, which doesn't seem great.  System in question is a DL360 Gen10. 

Quickspecs mentions nothing: https://www.hpe.com/psnow/doc/a00008159enus.pdf

Other HPE memory guides mention nothing: https://www.hpe.com/psnow/doc/a00017079enw

Configuration tutorials on youtube mention nothing.  https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AqqymYPAfWk

What would be a use case for PMMs in disk mode? Am I missing something?

This doc from Intel says hardware-based redundancy is not possible: https://www.intel.com/content/www/us/en/developer/articles/technical/speeding-up-io-workloads-with-intel-optane-dc-persistent-memory-modules.html

Cheers,

1 Answer 1

2

what happens in the event of a PMM failure

It is gone. If wou want redundancy, set up redundancy (i.e. RAID 1)

The only options I've found are software-based, which doesn't seem great

Why? Mirroring is trivial on the CPU - just submit a write command for the same data to both endpoints. Software is WAY better for that use case than hardware.

You must log in to answer this question.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged .