Hi,
Well, you can take a look around at Oracle Cluster File System. I've been using it, for a while, and so far so good. It's free, runs on top of Linux, and despite it's name , it's not a file system only for Oracle apps, and it's part of the kernel since version 2.6.16 .
Check it at http://oss.oracle.com/projects/ocfs2/
Best regards, Bruno Sousa
--- Mensagem Original---
On Wednesday 13 June 2007, Antonio da Silva Martins Junior wrote:
----- "Farkas Levente" lfarkas@bppiac.hu escreveu:
we've a few 10-20 server in a lan each has 4-8 hdd. we'd like to create one big file server on these server hard disks and we'd like to create it in a redundant way ie:
- if one (or more) of the hdd or server fails the whole filesystem
still usable and consistent.
...
Hi Farkas,
I think a start is to look on PVFS2 (www.pvfs.org).
Or maybe using nbd and softwareraid ???
Neither will eliminate servers and disks as single points of failiure.
If want one filesystem overy many disks on many servers and the ability to fail a disk-volume (raid or whatever) or an entire server and still have a usable fs then you need something like GPFS with replication enabled. Either way, not a trivial config nor trivial software (GPFS for example will cost you $$$ unless you're academic).
good luck, Peter
--------_______________________________________________ CentOS mailing list CentOS@centos.org http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos