http://www.drbd.org/ high availability rsync....no SAN ....no SCSI ... Cheap. Will it do 1000 files a second. Probably rsync uses the diff idea.
-----Original Message----- From: Jon Carnes [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: Tuesday, April 27, 2004 4:18 PM To: Triangle Linux Users Group discussion list Subject: Re: [TriLUG] Linux Clustering (high availability) and file systems On Tue, 2004-04-27 at 15:59, Tarus Balog wrote: > On Apr 27, 2004, at 3:46 PM, Jon Carnes wrote: > > > > Will there be multiple writes to the same files/directories? If you are > > mostly doing reads then there is no need for a SAN setup. Anything that > > puts new data out to the directory structures in a timely fashion will > > suffice. > > Actually, it will be heavily write intensive. We'll need to update 1000 > files every second. That's one of the reasons I think NFS will be too > slow. > > -T > Oracle Database Server. -- TriLUG mailing list : http://www.trilug.org/mailman/listinfo/trilug TriLUG Organizational FAQ : http://trilug.org/faq/ TriLUG Member Services FAQ : http://members.trilug.org/services_faq/ TriLUG PGP Keyring : http://trilug.org/~chrish/trilug.asc This email message is for the sole use of the intended recipients(s) and may contain confidential and privileged information of Bloodhound Software, Inc.. Any unauthorized review, use, disclosure is prohibited. If you are not the intended recipient, please contact the sender by reply email and destroy all copies of the original message. -- TriLUG mailing list : http://www.trilug.org/mailman/listinfo/trilug TriLUG Organizational FAQ : http://trilug.org/faq/ TriLUG Member Services FAQ : http://members.trilug.org/services_faq/ TriLUG PGP Keyring : http://trilug.org/~chrish/trilug.asc
