Hi All,

I am about to embark on a project that deals with allowing information 
archival, over time and seeing change over time as well. I can explain it a lot 
better, but I would certainly talk your ear off. I really don't have a lot of 
money to throw at the initial concept, but I have some. This device will host 
all of the operations for the first few months until I can afford to build a 
duplicate device. I already had a few parts of the idea done and ready to get 
live.

I am contemplating building a BackBlaze Style POD. The goal of the device is to 
start acting as a place to have the crawls store information, massage it, get 
it into db's and then notify the user the task is done so they can start 
looking at the results.

For reference here are a few links:

http://blog.backblaze.com/2009/09/01/petabytes-on-a-budget-how-to-build-cheap-cloud-storage/

and

http://cleanenergy.harvard.edu/index.php?ira=Jabba&tipoContenido=sidebar&sidebar=science

There is room for 45 drives in the case (technically a few more).

45 x 1tb 7200rpm drives is really cheap, about $60 each.

45 x 1.5tb 7200rpm drives are about $70 each.

45 x 2tb 7200rpm drives are about $120 each

45 x 3tb 7200rpm drives are about $180-$230 each (or more, some are almost $400)

I have question before I commit to building one and I was hoping to get advice.

1. Can anyone recommend a mobo/processor setup that can hold lots of RAM? Like 
24gb or 64gb or more? 

2. Hardware RAID or Software RAID for this?

3. Would CentOS be a good choice? I have never used CentOS on a device so 
massive. Just ordinary servers, so to speak. I assume that it could handle so 
many drives, a large, expanding file system.

4. Someone recommended ZFS but I dont recall that being available on CentOS, 
but it is on FreeBSD which I have little experience with.

5. How would someone realistically back something like this up?

Ultimately I know over time I need to distribute my architecture out and have a 
number of web-servers, balancing, etc but to get started I think this device 
with good backups might fit the bill.

I can be way more detailed if it helps, I just didn't want to clutter with 
information that might not be relevant.
-- 
Jason

_______________________________________________
CentOS mailing list
CentOS@centos.org
http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos

Reply via email to