Hello, that's right, you can test our croit.io software for free or watch how it works in a recording of a webinar https://youtu.be/uMNxOIP1kHI?t=752 >From our point of view, booting systems using PXE provides at least the same benefits as containers on a system but with much stronger integration. For example, we not only have debian10 buster images, but also suse15.2 leap that we can boot up anytime. You can even do that in the same cluster without a problem or migrate at any time between different operating systems. It makes you independent as well as flexible. If you break your OS, you simply press the reboot button and get a nice fresh and clean OS booted in your memory. Besides that, It is easy to maintain, solid, and all your hosts run on exactly the same software and configuration state (kernel, libs, Ceph, everything). -- Martin Verges Managing director Mobile: +49 174 9335695 E-Mail: martin.verges@xxxxxxxx Chat: https://t.me/MartinVerges croit GmbH, Freseniusstr. 31h, 81247 Munich CEO: Martin Verges - VAT-ID: DE310638492 Com. register: Amtsgericht Munich HRB 231263 Web: https://croit.io YouTube: https://goo.gl/PGE1Bx Am Di., 16. März 2021 um 22:07 Uhr schrieb Stefan Kooman <stefan@xxxxxx>: > > On 3/16/21 6:37 PM, Stephen Smith6 wrote: > > Hey folks - thought I'd check and see if anyone has ever tried to use > > ephemeral (tmpfs / ramfs based) boot disks for Ceph nodes? > > croit.io does that quite succesfully I believe [1]. > > Gr. Stefan > > [1]: https://www.croit.io/software/features > _______________________________________________ > ceph-users mailing list -- ceph-users@xxxxxxx > To unsubscribe send an email to ceph-users-leave@xxxxxxx _______________________________________________ ceph-users mailing list -- ceph-users@xxxxxxx To unsubscribe send an email to ceph-users-leave@xxxxxxx