custom NAS appliance without the hack
Ben Eisenbraun
bene-Gk2boCrsRs1AfugRpC6u6w at public.gmane.org
Sat May 9 23:18:49 EDT 2009
On Sat, May 09, 2009 at 05:55:23PM -0400, Tom Metro wrote:
> The author of that comparison concludes that OpenFiler generally
> performs better, and being a more complete distribution (that includes
> debugging tools) is easier to administer. But it's two years old, and I
> think FreeNAS is now available in a more complete form than just the 32
> MB version he used. He also makes no mention of ZFS (which wasn't
> available then), instead using UFS for the file system, which could have
> negatively impacted performance.
I didn't think ZFS was known to be very fast. I thought that flexibility
and reliability were supposed to be its selling points.
> Nexenta Systems sells a commercial NAS OS that I've read is based on a
> OpenSolaris kernel (w/ZFS) and Linux user space (don't know which, if
> any, distribution it resembles).
Their standalone OS product, NexentaOS, is Debian-based, so that would be
my guess. It looks pretty interesting to me, although I haven't tried it
out since I don't have any hardware well suited to OpenSolaris.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nexenta
> There's a project to combine the FreeBSD kernel with Debian user space:
Yuck. That never seemed like much of a win to me. That project has been
around for a while and they're only just now getting a base system into the
Debian repos, so I guess other people agree. :-)
-ben
--
you'll find that the only thing you can do easily is be wrong, and
that's hardly worth the effort. <norton juster>
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