Robert,
Consider instead of 10K giving a 2-day class for 1 or so folks that for
1K you give a 2-day remote course for ~10 folks.
That I could probably swing.
I often considered signing up for the Joyent training but it just never
jived enough at work for them to swing it. The stuff I did do I paid
myself so 1K seems within reach with the way things are nowodays.
Just a thought.
Thank You,
Will
On 7/8/16 1:12 PM, Garrett D'Amore wrote:
Crap. I just saw this now. I submitted a kickstarter:
https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/597419130/1111180831?token=ace70d75
I can cancel this if you’re pretty far along.
On Mon, Jul 4, 2016 at 11:41 AM, Robert Mustacchi <[email protected]
<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
On 7/1/16 22:12 , Garrett D'Amore wrote:
> its probably past time that i invest effort in the usb3 stack.
sadly my current employer has not expressed any interest in that
effort. anyone want to help subsidize the effort ?
For what it's worth, we're already working on an xhci driver at
Joyent.
It's something I'm working on as we know there's a lot of need for
this
around the community.
Robert
>> On Jul 1, 2016, at 8:09 PM, Dave Finster
<[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
>>
>> You might find that your better off investing in standard
spinning SAS disks but a very good SLOG like the HGST SSD800MH.B,
which cost around $800 AUD. The reason being that in a well built
SmartOS box, you’ll have ZFS ARC occupying RAM from which a good
portion of your database reads should be sourced from and when
sync writes do need to be done, the SLOG will help make them more
performant. ARC makes read performance exceptional for a cache
hit. As for zpool layout, for database workloads your better off
with a multi-way mirror (i.e. a pool full of mirror vdevs) as when
there is an ARC miss it should be performant (at least won’t incur
parity penalties in RAIDZ).
>>
>> The only things to watch out for if your acquiring new hardware
is NIC, HBA and USB compatibility. The best NICs you can have for
SmartOS are Intel based ones (be they integrated onto the
motherboard or as an add-in card), I’ve not had any issues at all
with LSI (now Avago) HBA cards whereas on-board SATA/SAS can be
hit and miss unless they are also LSI based (but can be painful to
reflesh if needed). The USB compatibility aspect is becoming more
important as Illumos doesn’t yet have an appropriate driver which
can cause boot issues and rules out keyboard interactions - some
boards have the ability to emulate USB2, but some work and some don’t.
>>
>>> On 2 Jul 2016, at 8:45 AM, [email protected]
<mailto:[email protected]> wrote:
>>>
>>> the vendor stated this:
>>>
>>> "Believe me, my programmers all were extremely frustrated when
Linux and Sybase ADS were unreliable."
>>>
>>> i hope that was badly worded; though linux has never been the
most reliable of the unix-like systems, i believe it's on a whole
different level from any version of windows. i was once an MCSE
but defected (back) to *nix because i wanted to get real work done
instead of fighting the operating system and related products.
>>>
>>> thanks for the suggestions thus far - all good stuff, and i
really appreciate the insight and recommendations. i didn't
realize joyent provided virtio drivers - i've been using the ones
from fedora for several years on the windows terminal server
(sitting on joyent_20140221T042147Z).
>>>
>>> i have often wondered about running an all-ssd zones pool. the
devs all poo-poo the use of consumer-grade disks, and sata in
general. and they have made great cases for doing so. but for most
of my uses, the price and potential performance looks extremely
attractive. i don't usually have the ability to drop a couple of
thousand dollars into a disk subsystem for these small
installations. the customers typically already have enough
hardware to run everything bare-metal, but i've tried hard to
virtualize everything for the many benefits provided by doing so
(plus of course the ones specific to using smartos/zfs).
>>>
>>> ----- On Jul 1, 2016, at 3:23 PM, Humberto Ramirez
<[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
>>> Ideally it should sit on a SmartOS zone but... I understand he
wants to run the database on top of NTFS...(Vendor requirement)
however Sybase ADS its also available for linux.
>>>
>>>> On Jul 1, 2016 2:56 PM, "Joerg Sonnenberger" <[email protected]
<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
>>>> On Fri, Jul 01, 2016 at 11:15:21AM -0400, Humberto Ramirez wrote:
>>>>> - Set "compression": "lz4" "block_size": 131072 (This one can
>>>>> only be set at creation)
>>>>
>>>> I would be careful with setting compression, since it can
easily be a
>>>> waste of time, depending on the database.
>>>>
>>>> Joerg
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> http://www.listbox.com
>>
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