On Fri, 8 Sep 2006, Jim Sloey wrote: > > Roch - PAE wrote: > > The hard part is getting a set of simple requirements. As you go into > > more complex data center environments you get hit with older Solaris > > revs, other OSs, SOX compliance issues, etc. etc. etc. The world where > > most of us seem to be playing with ZFS is on the lower end of the > > complexity scale.
... reformatted .. > I've been watching this thread and unfortunately fit this model. I'd > hoped that ZFS might scale enough to solve my problem but you seem to be > saying that it's mostly untested in large scale environments. About 7 > years ago we ran out of inodes on our UFS file systems. We used bFile as > middleware for a while to distribute the files across multiple disks and > then switched to VFS on SAN about 5 years ago. Distribution across file > systems and inode depletion continued to be a problem so we switched > middleware to another vendor that essentially compresses about 200 files > into a single 10Mb archive and uses a DB to find the file within the > archive on the correct disk. Expensive, complex and slow but effective > solution until the latest license renewal when we got hit with a huge > bill. I'd love to go back to a pure file system model and looked at > Reiser4, JFS, NTFS and now ZFS for a way to support over 100 million > small documents and 16Tb. We average 2 file reads and 1 file write per > second 24/7 with expected growth to 24Tb. I'd be willing to scrap > everything we have to find a non-proprietary long term solution. ZFS > looked like it might provide an answer. Are you saying it's not really > suitable for this type of application? No - that's not what he is saying. Personally I think (from the info presented) is that ZFS would be a viable long term solution to this storage headache. But the neat thing about ZFS, is that, with a spare AMD based box and, as few as 5 low-cost SATA drives, you can actually try it[1]. Think about this for a Second. You can put together a test ZFS box for less money than you would spend, in man-hours, talking about it as a _possible_ solution. [1] 5 to 10 SATA drives won't get you 16Tb - but it'll get you close enough to model the system with a substantial portion of your dataset. Regards, Al Hopper Logical Approach Inc, Plano, TX. [EMAIL PROTECTED] Voice: 972.379.2133 Fax: 972.379.2134 Timezone: US CDT OpenSolaris.Org Community Advisory Board (CAB) Member - Apr 2005 OpenSolaris Governing Board (OGB) Member - Feb 2006 _______________________________________________ zfs-discuss mailing list zfs-discuss@opensolaris.org http://mail.opensolaris.org/mailman/listinfo/zfs-discuss