Consoldated Network Storage?
bigstupid asks: "Is there anyway to better utilize storage space on your network? I have a home network with about nine permanently attached PCs. A few of these are older PII300 with smaller hard drives (3-10GB). What I want to do is consolidate as much of the network storage as possible. That is: Instead of 2.4GB here, 4.6GB there, 5GB hither, 5BG tither, and 6 GB yon, I would like this storage space to appear to any computer I designate a 'client' to see and use this storage space as one large (in the case above 23GB) volume. I know I can do this within a machine with logical volumes or RAID, but is there a piece of software - client or server side - that will do this on Linux or Windows?"
Look at OpenAFS.
--sdem
Each node has a spare 20GB partition that is currently doing *nothing*. I would simply love to find a filesystem solution that can handle stripping or mirroring for a nice 32*20/x GB of filespace
That easy. Create a partition on each box and export it via NFS. Then plunk down a NetBSD box on the network and RAID the partitions with RAIDframe. Export *that* partition via NFS as well. Export it via Samba and even the little Windows boxes can play.
FreeBSD has RAIDframe as well, but the NetBSD version is marginally more robust and has worked over NFS are far back as '98.
Moneyed corporations, non-working 'poor' and criminal prisoners are turning productive citizens into tax-slaves.