On Tue, Jun 29, 2004 at 02:29:55PM -0700, Clayton Weise wrote: > We use netapps (www.netapp.com) and it works great. One of the big > things that made me move towards the netapp in place of many of the > other NAS units out there was the fact that it runs a nix based OS. > Most of the ones, say.. Dell for example just run a stripped down > version of windows with file sharing for unix. It doesn't give you > the ability to make any tweaks to the nfs server. We've been using > the netapps for about 6 months now and it's been awesome. A client > that hosts in our datacenter turned us on to the netapps nas units. > He's been using them for I think about 2 years now and swears by > them.
Well, I have been using NetApp systems since 1997. They are absolutely wonderful systems. BUT They do not run any type of UNIX system, they run something called Data OnTap, current revision is 6.5. There are many models available. My old employer still has a F210 in production, this system is a Pentium 75 with 128MB of RAM using non-Ultra wide SCSI. It houses the RCS based configurations for the whole ISP. My old employer has a F720 in production for UNIX home directories and commercial webhosting data space. My old employer has a F720 in production for UNIX home directories and CIFS shares for the staff. My old employer has a F760 in production for UNIX home directories for the storage of mail in Maildir format, using Courier-IMAP for IMAP and POP3 access, Postfix as MTA/LDA. One small area is handled by vpopmail but that area is being phased out because of the qmail requirements. 30K mailboxes, 6000+ DSL accounts, many hundreds of T1s and colo customers - the NetApp systems ROCK for storage of critical data. But it doesn't run any kind of UNIX :) Oh, and good NetApp systems use Fibre-Channel drives, there are some newer systems that *look* like they might be ATA based, but I haven't played with them. Their near-storage systems (R series) is ATA based, but is not a general fileserver. Looking for cheaper than NetApp? http://www.winsys.com/products/flata.php Then use your favorite of UNIX systems (FreeBSD preferred by me) to be your NFS server OS of choice. Simple. Mostly cheap. Tell them I sent you. -- Mike Horwath, reachable via [EMAIL PROTECTED]