Cross-Platform Company Storage Architecture?
Eric^2 asks: "My company is preparing to implement a major network storage upgrade, and I'd like to get some ideas from Slashdot about what devices should be considered, and hopefully some experiences with some of the offerings that are available. What types of storage are you using and what would you recommend?"
"We are currently using approximately 2TB of storage space, and will need to expand to over 10TB in the next two to three years. We have a mix of Windows, Mac OS X, and Linux clients and servers. All of our authentication is presently done through an Active Directory. If possible, we would like to centralize all of the storage into a single namespace, such as OpenAFS or DFS. Anything we purchase will have to be under maintenance contract for hardware such as failed drives or controllers. Ideally, whatever system we choose would allow us to purchase both high-speed SCSI spindles for our transactional needs and lower-speed SATA high capacity drives for our archival storage needs."
Depends on what your budget is, but I would look into Network Appliance (http://www.netapp.com). Their systems are top notch, and have some very cool software features. They support NFS, CIFS, iSCSI, and Fibre Channel as connection methods.
-Randy
Either through plan9 port or the real thing
Venti is block level and, as such, coalesces identical blocks, a bit like LZW, so backing up 100 Windows machines doesn't take up 100x the disk space of backing up 1 windows machine.
http://cm.bell-labs.com/sys/doc/venti.html
http://cm.bell-labs.com/magic/man2html/8/venti
http://swtch.com/plan9port/man/man8/venti.html
http://swtch.com/plan9port/man/man8/vbackup.html
Sean Quinlan (one of the 2 Venti inventors) moved from Bell Labs by Google.
08:56-10:13
News for nerds, stuff that matters
Post Comment
Database maintenance is currently taking place. Some items such as comment posting and moderation are currently unavailable.
MySQL r0x0rs
There are places where the networks are not touching,and there are places where they are-Boeing's Lori Gunter
I would definitely recommend NetApp. We have both a Linux (Debian) and Windows environment and the NetApp works brilliant with both. We initially went with the FAS270 which can scale to 6TB directly or with the upgrade of the "head" I think you can go up to a few PB. It was the most cost effective and scaleable we could find and their support/response is much better than EMC. Builtin technology is fantastic and flexible and I know they have a tie-in module for cheaper archival, I think (not really sure on that part) it's called snapvault.
You need to see how you want to access your storage, and what is going to be running on it, as to how you go:-
SAN - block level data access to storage. Good for databases; low client counts (because SAN ports are expensive relative to ethernet) - but with high IO demands. EMC are good, but pricey - a low to mid end Clariion would probably be the right range to aim at.
NAS - file level data access to storage. Good for situations where there are many clients connecting, and their IO demands are not excessive. Netapps filers are very good at this (if youy can find information on their new OS (10GX) then it's VERY interesting. ILM use them in their render farms.
iSCSI - a blend of the best of both, but it's still looked upon as an emerging technology. You get (or did) free iSCSI licenses with netapps filers.
O'Reilly have a good book on this. "Using SAN's and NAS" which is vendor agnostic http://www.oreilly.com/catalog/sansnas/index.html
Free NAS Wireless, secure, open source, multi platform, easy to configure, etc etc etc. For free! I've used it. Compared to the LaCie network devices (not the USB LaCies, they're great) it is FASTER! But a dedicated Linux box you config yourself and with a tuned IP stack is quicker. However, for the effort of downloading a teensy ISO, burning a CD, and spending 5 minutes to install and config, this solution is really astounding. www.freenas.org
Moderation in All Things... Especially Moderation - gurutc