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Computers & Networking
mergerfs - pooling of disks in linux (JBOD)
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<blockquote data-quote="Wolvebain" data-source="post: 671896" data-attributes="member: 13371"><p>@trapexit: I'm running a currently 6GbE network fileserver, and will be adding another 2x 4port GbE card soon. It's part of my home/work-R&D set-up. </p><p>I'm currently running Windows Storage Space with an SSD tier, and have created iSCSI targets for other 'compute nodes', each running 6GbE -- If single GbE max transfer speed is ~125MB/s, we can assume that 6GbE will be capable of ~500MB/s.</p><p>Granted, it's not a typical set-up, and it would have been great if mergerfs had that capability for me. Still want to give it a go... </p><p></p><p>I can see how mergerfs can benefit some other places / people I know. mergerfs + external USB 3.0 HDDs seems perfect for machines with saturated drive slots; definitely beats LVM when a disk crashes.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Wolvebain, post: 671896, member: 13371"] @trapexit: I'm running a currently 6GbE network fileserver, and will be adding another 2x 4port GbE card soon. It's part of my home/work-R&D set-up. I'm currently running Windows Storage Space with an SSD tier, and have created iSCSI targets for other 'compute nodes', each running 6GbE -- If single GbE max transfer speed is ~125MB/s, we can assume that 6GbE will be capable of ~500MB/s. Granted, it's not a typical set-up, and it would have been great if mergerfs had that capability for me. Still want to give it a go... I can see how mergerfs can benefit some other places / people I know. mergerfs + external USB 3.0 HDDs seems perfect for machines with saturated drive slots; definitely beats LVM when a disk crashes. [/QUOTE]
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Computers & Networking
mergerfs - pooling of disks in linux (JBOD)
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