Freddie Cash wrote:
On Wed, Mar 24, 2010 at 8:47 AM, Michal <mic...@ionic.co.uk> wrote:
I wrote a really long e-mail but realised I could ask this question far
far easier, if it doesn't make sense, the original e-mail is bellow
Can I use ZFS to create a multinode storage area. Multiple HDD's in
Multiple servers to create one target of, for example, //officestorage
Allowing me to expand the storage space when needed and clients being
able to retrieve data (like RAID0 but over devices not HDD)
Here is an example I found which is where I'm getting some ideas from
http://www.howtoforge.com/how-to-build-a-low-cost-san-p3
Horribly, horribly, horribly complex. But, then, that's the Linux world.
:)
Server 1: bunch of disks exported via iSCSI
Server 2: bunch of disks exported via iSCSI
Server 3: bunch of disks exported via iSCSI
"SAN" box: uses all those iSCSI exports to create a ZFS pool
For what it's worth - I think this is a good idea! iSCSI and ZFS make it
extraordinarily flexible to do this. You can have a RAIS - redundant
array of inexpensive servers :)
For example: each server box hosts 8-12 drives - use a hardware
controller with RAID6 and a BBU to create a single volume (if FreeBSD
booting issues allow, but that can be worked around). Export this volume
via iSCSI. Repeat for the rest of the servers. Then, on the client,
create a RAIDZ. or if you trust your setup that much. a straight striped
ZFS volume. If you do it the RAIDZ way, one of your storage servers can
fail completely.
As you need more space, add more servers in batches of three (if you did
RAIDZ, else the number doesn't matter), add them to the client as usual.
The "client" in this case can be a file server, and you can achieve
failover between several of those by using e.g. carp, heartbeat, etc. -
if the master node fails, some other one can reconstitute the ZFS pool
ad make it available.
But, you need very fast links between the nodes, and I wouldn't use
something like this without extensively testing the failure modes.
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