On 11/9/05, Robin Mordasiewicz <robin@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > On Wed, 9 Nov 2005, Bryan J. Smith wrote: > > On Wed, 2005-11-09 at 11:00 +0100, Henk van Lingen wrote: > >> Hi Bryan, > >> Please tell. I have to replace our old Sun Enterprise fileserver > >> (solaris8), which does NFS and Samba (homedirectories, projects file > >> space). It will be x86 hardware, but I'm looking for the best filesystem > >> for the job (let's say one terabyte). It has to have quota and ACL support. > > > > NetApp is very costly per $ versus traditional file storage. But the > > Data OnTap OS with WAFL filesystem was basically designed by 2 of Sun's > > original NFS designers. WAFL works very different than most traditional > > UNIX server filesystems. > > > I will attest that NetApp is an excellent choice. NetApp is more pricey, > but they do have an entry level system called the FAS270, which is leaps > ahead of an EMC Clarion if you can even compare them, and for the added > flexibilty the price is not very much more. I think NetApp pretty much > stands alone. I don't think another solution will allow you to do CIFS, > NFS, iSCSI, and Fibre Channel all from the same platform, but there may > be. I have used the RedHat Clustering solution and it was a hassle. > > P.s. I have nothing to do with the NetApp company, but I just love their > product after having used it in almost every place I have worked at. Anyone considered or used OpenFiler? It's based on CentOS. http://www.openfiler.com/ -- Leonard Isham, CISSP Ostendo non ostento.