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Lies, damned lies, and statistics!
If you have read my three previous posts (1, 2, 3), you may walk away with an impression that on a drive presented from a high-end enterprise class disk array, Windows file fragmentation does not have a significant performance impact. And I’ve given you empirical data—oh yeah, statistics—to support that ...
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Too many DBAs tend to view a drive presented from a Storage Area Network (SAN) as something of a monolithic nature. They look at the drive as if it had some intrinsic performance characteristics. This view doesn't help one appreciate the true performance characteristics of such a drive.
A more constructive view is to look at the drive as an I/O ...
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In Windows Server 2003, you can use the Disk Management console to create a
striped volume over multiple dynamic disks (well, you can also create a
mirrored, a RAID-5 volume, etc). If these disks (or LUNs) are presented from a
SAN, most likely you can stripe across the same storage devices--making up these
LUNs--inside the SAN to present ...
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