I think there are projects which access S3 as a WebDAV store, as well as S3 "filesystems". If there was a S3 Jackrabbit persistence manager being developed, I'd be interested as well.
-- jerome Martin Perez wrote: > > Really glad to read that. Massive distributed storage propositions are > being > proven like very good solutions for massive scaling. I guess the key > challenge in this case is trying to minimize bandwidth usage as much as > possible in addition to the traditional storage challenge. > > Would be really nice to test it when that global data store stuff you are > working in is done. If at that time I have some web projec using > Jackrabbit > (hopefully) I would love to spend some time playing with that. However, It > would be even better if someone already has experiences or is already > trying > to do it and shares his experience. > > Cheers, > Martin > > On 6/5/07, Jukka Zitting <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: >> >> Hi, >> >> On 6/4/07, Martin Perez <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: >> > Is there anyone developing something like a Amazon S3 persistence >> manager? >> > >> > If not, it seems to me like a good candidate for a new project ( it is >> too >> > late for SOC ), or perhaps it is an insane idea? >> >> I haven't heard of anyone actively working on something like that, but >> I agree that it would be a cool idea. >> >> Actually S3 was floating around in my mind when I wrote the NGP >> proposal (http://jackrabbit.apache.org/dev/ngp.html). S3 or another >> similar massively distributed storage mechanism would work very well >> with the NGP concepts. >> >> I'm currently working on a related more short-term idea of adding a >> global "data store" that would handle all binary properties (and >> possibly other data like item bundles as well). The data store concept >> is designed to work very well with remote or distributed storage, so >> S3 would be an interesting option there as well. >> >> BR, >> >> Jukka Zitting >> > > -- View this message in context: http://www.nabble.com/S3-persistence-manager-tf3864934.html#a11036005 Sent from the Jackrabbit - Dev mailing list archive at Nabble.com.
