On Fri, 2008-05-30 09:03:35 +0100, Gerrard Geldenhuis <Gerrard.Geldenhuis@datacash.com> wrote: > On Behalf Of Jan-Benedict Glaw > > I'm just thinking about using my friend's overly empty harddisks for a > > common large filesystem by merging them all together into a single, > > large storage pool accessible by everybody. [...] > > It would be nice to see if anybody of you did the same before (merging > > the free space from a lot computers into one commonly used large > > filesystem), if it was successful and what techniques > > (LVM/NBD/DM/MD/iSCSI/Tahoe/Freenet/Other P2P/...) you used to get there, > > and how well that worked out in the end. > > Maybe have a look at GFS. GFS (or GFS2 fwiw) imposes a single, shared storage as its backend. At least I get that from reading the documentation. This would result in merging all the single disks via NBD/LVM to one machine first and export that merged volume back via NBD/iSCSI to the nodes. In case the actual data is local to a client, it would still be first send to the central machine (running LVM) and loaded back from there. Not as distributed as I hoped, or are there other configuration possibilities to not go that route? MfG, JBG -- Jan-Benedict Glaw jbglaw@lug-owl.de +49-172-7608481 Signature of: Alles wird gut! ...und heute wirds schon ein bißchen besser. the second :
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