On Tue, Jul 15, 2014 at 7:04 PM, <kokam...@hera.eonet.ne.jp> wrote: >> not a fair comparsion. > > Yes, I'd have been more specific. > my intension was cwfs > fossil+venti of 9atom >> fossil+venti labs. > I did not consider kenfs itself, because I consider it should be > file+auth+cpu server. The last is not important, but for drawterm > from others. > > Recent kenfs can be such a machine? > Please remember I plan it for my private home machine, not > any sofisticated office use.
kenfs works well, but you have to be well prepared to maintain it. Invest in a decent UPS - preferably one that is supported by the auto-shutdown (ISTR support was added for that a while back). You need to be careful when sizing your cache - I would invest in a pair of decent SSDs for cache, and two or more drives for housing the WORM. Be prepared for failure. The last large kensfs I maintained (around 16TB usable, 48TB raw) worked very well but would still crash one every year or two. Make sure you keep hard copies of your fsconfig and get comfortable with scripting as erik mentioned. That was in an office environment. At home I use fossil+(plan9port)venti running on linux-based NAS. This ends up working very well for me since I have resources to spare on that machine. This also lets me backup my arenas via CrashPlan. I use a cheap SSD for fossil in my file server and a small SATA DOM for booting (the idea is I can throw away the SSD at any time and still recover). Speed has been on par with kenfs, but it takes a little work to get there. I hope this is useful to you - maintaining an fs shouldn't be taken on lightly, but it is one of the best ways to understand what it means to maintain a plan9 installation. Cheers, Steve