On Thu, 16 Sep 2004, Jan Grant wrote:

On Thu, 16 Sep 2004, Sam wrote:

Let's suppose you generate an exabyte of storage per year.  Filling a 64-bit
filesystem would take you approximately 8 million years.

Hang on, I'm not sure I know where these numbers are coming from.

1PB is - what? 2^50 bytes? That looks closer to 2^64 than your
figures indicate. I'd imagine an exabyte a year ought to be topping out
after 16 years. I'm missing about half-a-dozen orders of magnitude
somewhere it seems.

1PB is indeed 2^50 bytes, but filesystems don't address on the byte, but on the block (1K, 4K, 8k, ...). The numbers I'm using assume the filesystem addresses on the sector, which is unrealistically small. Jack it up to a 16K blocksize and you jump a few hundred ZB in size.

Yes, it's a single filesystem. But the storage most likely won't be all
in one place. Making it look like it's accessible from one place is a
good thing.

... are you hinting at multiple globally remote block accessible storage sets? Otherwise I'm at a loss.

Sam

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