ZFS, the Last Word in File Systems? 564
guigouz writes "Sun is carrying a feature story about its new ZFS File System - ZFS, the dynamic new file system in Sun's Solaris 10 Operating System (Solaris OS), will make you forget everything you thought you knew about file systems. ZFS will be available on all Solaris 10 OS-supported platforms, and all existing applications will run with it. Moreover, ZFS complements Sun's storage management portfolio, including the Sun StorEdge QFS software, which is ideal for sharing business data."
billion billion? (Score:5, Funny)
Unlimited scalability
As the world's first 128-bit file system, ZFS offers 16 billion billion times the capacity of 32- or 64-bit systems.
Microsoft immediately countered by saying WinFS [microsoft.com] will now support "twelveteen million billion times" as much storage as Sun's ZFS, and is "a bazillion times" more secure.
When reached for comment, Sun CEO Scott McNealy [sun.com] replied "neener neener". Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer [microsoft.com] responded by putting gum in Sun President Jonathan Schwartz [sun.com]'s hair.
Re:billion billion? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:billion billion? (Score:5, Informative)
Re:billion billion? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:billion billion? (Score:4, Funny)
Re:billion billion? (Score:4, Funny)
For example, 'sassdfadef' is a number I think is a 2 with one thousand 3s after it. It's really moot
Re:billion billion? (Score:5, Funny)
British or American? (Score:3, Interesting)
True. However, it is more ambiguous than "million million million", as absent minded Brits might interpret it as a "million million million million".
Or would you rather they say 6.0 × 10^18?
Yes.
Most people can't imagine that.
Most people can't imagine it anyway, whether you call it "six billion billion", "6.0 x 10^18", "6 x 2^60", or "1.27 x e^43". Or understand any number higher than the number of dollars they carry in their wallet, for that matt
Bill Gates just called.... (Score:4, Funny)
If Bill Gates had a nickel for every time Windows crashed...
Re:billion billion? (Score:4, Interesting)
Whenever I see or hear the word "billion" the first thing I ask is that US billion or British billion?
"six times ten raised to the power of eighteen" seems much more clear and precise.
Re:billion billion? (Score:3, Informative)
Re:billion billion? (Score:5, Informative)
Nope. He said he'd never been outside the UK, so I'd be fairly certain he's aware of land outside the US.
Also living in the UK, I can attest that whenever you hear '1 billion', '1000 million' is meant. The UK converted to this for accounting purposes during the 70's.
The same I suspect is true for most of previously Europe-dominated countries (say India for example).
India, in particular, is toally different. They don't rely on millions and billions but 'crore' and 'lakh' which are 10million and 100k respectively.
Re:billion billion? (Score:4, Funny)
Yer right doesn't roll the way a billion billion does.
Re:billion billion? (Score:3, Funny)
Re:billion billion? (Score:3, Insightful)
Then, since it's actually a billion billion at stake, try to imagine that half by half mile square full of tiny plastic chips.
Finally, put them in an oversized bathtub, surround the tub with video games, a bad pizza parlor and tired parents, and wham! You're Chuck E Cheese. Therefore, we can state fir
Why don't they just describe the capacity in (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Why don't they just describe the capacity in (Score:4, Informative)
Seriously, I would LOVE to use "Sagan" as a unit of counting "billions" or something.
Re:billion billion? (Score:4, Funny)
What's it for?
Installing Windows ?
Re:billion billion? (Score:5, Funny)
pinky in corner of mouth.
Re:billion billion? (Score:5, Insightful)
A 64-bit (unsigned) binary number can already store values up to 16 billion billion (actually, closer to 18, but who's counting). That's roughly 2.5 billion individually addressable locations for every man, woman, and child living on Earth.
Shouldn't that be enough to hold us for a few generations at least?
Re:billion billion? (Score:5, Funny)
I dunno, man. I've got a lot of porn...
Re:billion billion? (Score:4, Informative)
Hmm.
If you had a filesystem 2^64 bytes wide, and your average porn jpeg was 100kB, then this means that you could store 1x10^14 images on it. That's 100'000'000'000'000 of them.
Assuming you're male and heterosexual, this means that every woman on the planet would have to take 30'000 compromising pictures of herself to fill it up; or about 60'000 assuming you're not into the weird stuff.
You're right, that's a lot of porn.
Re:billion billion? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:billion billion? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:billion billion? (Score:3, Informative)
Again, what exactly are you planning to film? :)
Silly AC (Score:3, Insightful)
Why bother with folders as a root? You can create a folder hierarchy *with* a database too.
Re:billion billion? (Score:4, Insightful)
Well 128 Bit is more of an issue of coming up with something without a limit or a limit that anyone any time soon will use up. The difference between 64bit and 128 bit is the diffence of a number that we can handle and comprehend to a number that is much to big for our minds to properly comprehend.
How can someone fill a 64bit file system, Well a large company or government organization that stores all their persons files onto one file system. Or say a program that gives its logs in seporate files. Or say storing uncompiled movies frame by frame. Or having an archive of data spanning hundreds of years. Yes there are ways around it now. But sometimes have a file system that doesn't have those limits. Comes in handy, nor nessarly for not but to expend into the future.
Open source (Score:4, Informative)
And it looks like it's going to be opensourced along with most of Solaris 10!
Presumably a 32 bit machine will be able to handle a 128 bit file system, in the same way as Solaris 10 is currently destined for (at most) 64 bits.
Re:Open source (Score:5, Interesting)
Assuming the Solaris 10 will be true open source (not like Microsoft's "shared source"), as well as GPL compatibile, would I be able to use ZFS on my GNU/Linux desktop? Will ZFS be a viable alternative to ext3 and ReiserFS? Or is the overhead too big?
Re:Open source (Score:5, Funny)
Patents and other Bad Signs. (Score:5, Interesting)
This article is shocking. I'm used to much less hype and far more technical details from Sun. Software patents and bullshit are not what I expect when I follow a link to them.
I don't like any of this.
Re:Patents and other Bad Signs. (Score:4, Interesting)
Opensource is useless when it's patent encumbered.
The GPL [gnu.org] states the following...
I thought that if the patent holder distributes patented material under the GPL, it is a declaration that the holder has relinquished control over the patented material for as long as it is applied under the GPL.
Re:Open source (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Open source (Score:4, Insightful)
Out of letters. (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Out of letters. (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Out of letters. (Score:5, Informative)
To those who dont know.. [ comes after Z in ASCII and unicode-latin
Re:Out of letters. (Score:3, Insightful)
Technically.... (Score:5, Funny)
Thank you.
Two things... (Score:5, Insightful)
2) Is it just me, or is the post surprisingly bereft of unique details? I mean, integration with all existing applications is rather assumed, given that it's a file system and all...
Re:Two things... (Score:5, Funny)
"Neither architecture pays a byte-swapping tax due to Sun's patent-pending "adaptive endian-ness" technology"
Adaptive endian-ness? What a stupid thing to include in a press release...there has to be a better way to say that.
Just announced by Sun:
"ANMF, our new file system (Ambiguous Nomenclature FS) will be filled with file cataloguing technology stuff that allows faster-ish operations that result in application goodness".
Re:Two things... (Score:3, Funny)
Neither. I mean, it's you, but it's not just you.
The details are there; you just can't remember them:
ZFS, the dynamic new file system in Sun's Solaris 10 Operating System (Solaris OS), will make you forget everything you thought you knew about file systems.
Hmf. (Score:5, Insightful)
So, what was the point of creating a 128-bit filesystem?
-1, Marketing Hype.
*Yawn*
Re:Hmf. (Score:5, Informative)
Getting rid of file/drive size limitations for the foreseeable future?
64 bits is awfully big already (Score:5, Informative)
It would take over 500 years to fill a 64 bit filesystem written at 1GB/sec (and of course 500 years to read it back again). 64 bits is already an impossibly large figure. There's absolutely nothing special or clever whatsoever about doubling the size of your pointers aside from using up more disk space for all the metadata.
64 bits is enough for today's filesystems in much the same way that 256 bit AES is enough for today's encryption - there are far bigger things that will require complete system changes than that so called "limit". I suspect a better filesystem will come along well before those 500 years are up... I agree with grandparent:
-1, Marketing Hype.
Re:64 bits is awfully big already (Score:5, Insightful)
One product already can transfer a Terrabyte per second, so that would cut the transfer down to half a year. And I imagine that transfer rate would continue to increase.
I don't see how one would necessarily argue against such a thing for products that will go for cluster and supercomputer use. I say might as well get the bugs out so when you can so that once the 65th bit is needed, the supercomputer suppliers are ready.
http://www.sc-conference.org/sc2004/storcloud.h
Re:64 bits is awfully big already (Score:4, Interesting)
Somehow, an alternate history where 80286 was 64-bit instead of 16-bit (while everything else staying the same) comes to mind when reading the Sun's marketing on this.
Re:64 bits is awfully big already (Score:4, Interesting)
This is about the same argument as IPv6 addressing: it's expensive to change the size of the address space, so make it absurdly large because bits of address space are cheap, you enable some interesting unforseen applications, and you put off a forced migration.
While I agree that 128-bit block addressing is overkill for a single computer, once you're going to expand past a 64-bit filesystem, there's not much point in going smaller than a 128-bit fileystem. It's not like you'd save money making it an 80-bit filesystem.
As to your point about the speed of a hard drive vs. the addressible space in the filesystem, keep in mind that filesystems are much larger than disks. For example, it's not that unusual (in cooler UNIX environments) for everyone in a company to work in one large distributed filesystem, which may run across hundreds or thousands of hard drives. Now imagine a building full of people working with very large files (e.g. video production) where you could easily accumulate terabytes of data. Wouldn't it be nice to manage your online, nearline, and offline storage as a system, extremely large filesystem? Or, for real blue-sky thinking, imagine that everyone on the planet uses a single shared, distributed filesystem for everything. Wouldn't it be cool to address _everything_ using a single, consistent scheme no matter where you are. Cool, eh?
Re:64 bits is awfully big already (Score:5, Insightful)
No, precisely because we can't do it now, and for the very predictable future, we shouldn't be wasting all that disk space, access and CPU time for a boundary that no production system is likely to ever reach before they get upgraded. That's just practicality.
Seagate apparently sold 18.3 million desktop drives last year. Assuming they're all about 120GB (which is generous of me), that would be about 17.6*10^18 bits. Guess what, that's 2^64 bits. Yes, you would have to buy every single desktop hard drive Seagate shipped in the last year to have the capacity to fill a 64 bit filesystem. And find space for 18 million drives. And a power station to deliver the several hundred megawatts you'd need.
Even at 2 times drive capacity growth per year that's still a ridiculously unattainable figure. In 14 years time you'd only need to buy 1000 drives (which are now 2000TB each). But 14 years is a geological time scale when it comes to computers. You'd have wasted 14 years of CPU time and disk space devoted to those extra 64 bits.
If you still think 64 bits isn't enough, how about 96 bits? It would take 46 years before hard disks were big and cheap enough so you could fill the filesystem by buying 1000 of them. But no, they chose 128 bits because it sounded good.
think logarithmatic scale (Score:3, Interesting)
And com'n, don't be so against hypes. Not all numbers are evil. And the overhead to process some extra bits are
Re:64 bits is awfully big already (Score:4, Insightful)
2) Migrating from one address space to another is painful. Why make it more frequent by aiming low? Do you think migration would be any less painful in 14 years?
3) New applications: Broadband didn't just result in really fast web-page downloads - the entire online music industry stems from that. The original creators of TCP/IP had no idea that they were developing media on-demand, they were making it so that you could transfer bits from one archaic machine to another.
Building flexible, capable systems creates an environment where development isn't as constrained by limitations - resulting in new, unpredictable developments.
Re:Hmf. (Score:5, Interesting)
It's your density, Luke.
Re:Hmf. (Score:3, Insightful)
2^128 is about 3.4e38. Now, let's be generous and asume we can control the spin of every electron we come across and incorporate it into a quantum storage device, such that each electron represented a bit of information (either left- or right-spin). Now, because I'm still being generous, I'm going to say the Earth's oceans contain 2e9 km^3, or 2e18 m^3 (compare here [hypertextbook.com]) Assuming all this water is liquid, its density is 1000 kg/m^3 (abouts), so we have 2e24 g of water.
2e24 g o
Re:Hmf. (Score:3, Funny)
Unlimited scalability (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Unlimited scalability (Score:5, Funny)
Thanks
Szo
Re:Unlimited scalability (Score:3, Funny)
So what you're saying is that they offer absolutely no storage capacity at all. Taken from the absolute authority of all knowledge in the universe I quote:
"Universe, The
Some information to help you live in it.
1. Area: infinite.
2. Imports: none.
It is impossible to import things into an infinite area, there being no outside to import things from.
3. Exports: none.
See Imports.
4. Population: none.
It is know
Cool but.... (Score:3, Interesting)
Perhaps they had to rewrite an LVM from scratch in order to opensource it?
What is their disk allocation scheme? (Score:4, Informative)
Frequently accessed data needs to be spread out on all the disks for the fastest access, so does that mean Sun has FS files/tables that track usage and repositions data based on that?
Re:What is their disk allocation scheme? (Score:5, Interesting)
This is a good thing - queueing theory shows a single unified pool has better performance than several smaller ones. People who try to tune databases by dedicating drives to redo logs don't usually realize what they are doing is counterproductive - they optimize locally for one area, at the expense of global throughput for the entire system.
ZFS uses copy-on-write (a modified block is written wherever the disk head happens to be, not where the old one used to be). This means writes are sequential (as with all journaled filesystems) and also since the old block is still on disk (until it is garbage collected) this gives the ability to take snapshots, something that is vital for making coherent backups now that nightly maintenance windows are mostly history. This also leads to file fragmentation so enough RAM to have a good buffer cache helps.
Because the scheduler works best if it has full visibility of every physical disk, rather than dealing with an abstract LUN on a hardware RAID, they actually recommend ZFS be hosted on a JBOD array (just a bunch of disks, no RAID) and have the RAID be done in software by ZFS. Since the RAID is integrated with the filesystem, they have the scope for optimizations that is not available if you have a filesystem trying to optimize on one side and a RAID controller (or separate LVM software) on the other side. Network Applicance does something like this with their WAFL network filesystem to offer decent performance despite the overhead of NFS.
With modern, fast CPUs, software RAID can easily outperform hardware RAID. It is quite common for optimizations like hardware RAID made at a certain time to become counterproductive as technology advances and the assumptions behind the premature optimization are no longer valid. A long time ago, IBM offloaded some database access code in its mainframe disk controllers. It used to be a speed boost, but as the mainframe CPU speeds improved (and the feature was retained for backward compatibility), it ended up being 10 times slower than the alternative approach.
Re:What is their disk allocation scheme? (Score:3, Informative)
There already is a ZFS. (Score:5, Informative)
There already is an HFS as well. (Score:5, Funny)
Then why didn't IBM call its improved HFS "HFS Plus"? No wait, that would collide with Apple's HFS and HFS Plus, used in Mac OS.
It would appear that there can be only twenty-six distinct file systems. Then Microsoft went and innovated NTFS with Four-Letter-Word File System Technology, which actually was just a copy of IBM's HPFS, the first to introduce File System Named After a Competitor [hp.com] Technology.
UFS2/SU (Score:3, Interesting)
But, with ZFS, maybe we finally have found a FS with replacing it with. I sure look forward to trying Solaris 10, though I'm sure that I will find that SunOS has a better feal to it, like always.
Maybe DragonflyBSD will be the one to do this, FreeBSD is generally more restrictive to radical changes; for good reasons, you don't get that stability without reason.
If it's the last word (Score:3, Funny)
Just better than the old stuff from Sun (Score:5, Insightful)
and
Compared to AIX or HP-UX, 28 steps is shockingly bad, both have had much simpler logical volume management for several versions now (AIX for 5 years or more? certainly as long as I have used it). The existing Solaris 9 logical volume infrastructure is years behind the competition, this is bringing it up to date, but not putting it far ahead.
Ewan
Re:Just better than the old stuff from Sun (Score:3, Informative)
Both have more interesting and pretty ways of playing with volumes. Disksuite is a free, add on package, and Veritas charges an arm and a leg for their Volume Manager.
In addition to the ot
Re:Just better than the old stuff from Sun (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Just better than the old stuff from Sun (Score:4, Insightful)
IBM has had a LVM since the early to mid 90s.
Linux has one now.
If Sun had bothered to keep up the Jones on these little things, Veritas could possible have never become what they are.
Last I heard, they were going to start offering VXVM and VVM on AIX. My AIX admins did not care. They figured why would they spend the money for the product when they already have a usable system that is supported by the OEM.
Re:Just better than the old stuff from Sun (Score:3, Informative)
What sort of crap is this? (Score:4, Interesting)
Can someone please provide a link to some technical details other than it being 128-bit? What does this file system actually do that is even remotely special? What's under the covers? And, more importantly, does it actually work as described?
-1,Uninformative
Re:What sort of crap is this? (Score:3, Insightful)
here are some more details, but nowhere near as long a list as you'll get from reading the article (since the full list would mean quoting the article, which i suggest reading).
- data checksums eliminate the need for fsck
- easy to add disks to the pool
- seems to support raid 0 and at least one real raid
- data rollbacks (sound like netapp snapshots)
- can mount the s
That's a lot of storage (Score:5, Funny)
Oh wow! (Score:3, Funny)
I'll do a dance of utter joy if so. Disksuite is 10 pounds of shit in a 5 pound bag.
- A.P.
Re:Oh wow! (Score:3, Informative)
Also, I'm tired running a volume manager simply to mirror root, and a separate, expensive volume manager (with a different level of support from a different vendor) simply to manage my data volumes, and I'm distressed that this is the "standard" way to do it in Solaris.
Hop
Re:Oh wow! (Score:3, Informative)
You're right, it'd be nice to see some regularization.
Another quote to cherish (Score:4, Insightful)
Who else instantly thought of, "640 K ought to be enough for anybody", uttered by the chief architect of twenty years of chaos?
Re:Another quote to cherish (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Another quote to cherish (Score:3, Interesting)
Yep. I think they might be right on this one.
~D
Different architecture, same functionality? (Score:4, Interesting)
Until now it does sound just like raid, but:
I guess I just don't get it; I know they are talking about logical corruption and not a physical failure, but this is kind of like raid with somethink like SMART, or isn't it?
And what kinds of corruption can there be? Journaling filesystems already work well for write errors and such, or so I thought.
I know the architecture seems innovative and different (at least for me), but is there really new functionality?
Sorry if I seem ignorant this time. I don't know if I was able to get my point across; the things this filesystem does, wouldn't they be better left on a different layer?
What I really want to see in a file system... (Score:5, Insightful)
Such a feature would rock, because it would be possible to make things like installers completely atomic: interrupt the installer process and the whole thing rolls back.
Re:What I really want to see in a file system... (Score:5, Informative)
http://www.namesys.com/benchmarks.html
"V4 is a fully atomic filesystem, keep in mind that these performance numbers are with every FS operation performed as a fully atomic transaction. We are the first to make that performance effective to do. Look for a user space transactions interface to come out soon....
Finally, remember that reiser4 is more space efficient than V3, the df measurements are there for looking at....;-) "
Apparently... (Score:5, Funny)
"We've rethought everything and rearchitected it," says Jeff Bonwick
Rearchitected? WTF? Howsaboot "Redesigned?"
I'm still wrapping my brain around "adaptive endian-ness" as well.
--QTone
Sounds really nice (Score:5, Informative)
Some highllights, for those that don't (or won't) RTA:
* Data integrity. Apparently it uses file checksums to error-correct files, so files will never be corrupted. About time someone did this.
* Snapshots, like netapp?
* Transactional nature/copy-on-write
* Auto-striping
* Really, Really Large volume support
All of this leads to speed and reliability. There's a lot of other stuff (varying blocks sizes, write queueing, stride stuff which I haven't heard about in years), but all of it leads to above.
Oh, and they simplified their admin too.
It's hard to make a filesystem look exciting. Most of the time it just works, until it fails. The data checksum stuff looks interesting, in that they built error correction into the FS (like CDs and RAID but better hopefully).
It might also do away with the idea of "space free on a volume," since the marketing implies that each FS grows/shrinks dynamically, pulling storage out of the pool as needed.
Any users want to chime in?
Re:Sounds really nice (Score:3, Interesting)
So, I take it that back in the days of DOS, you never got a CRC error trying to copy an important file off a floppy?
Patent-pending adaptive endianness? (Score:4, Insightful)
Looks to me like nothing more than an excuse to put up a patent tollboth for anyone who wants to implement ZFS.
Curious points (Score:4, Interesting)
ok, that aside. First 128bit file system, and get this: transactional object model
I think this means it is optimistic but they figure it has blazing fast performance, who am I to argue. Fed up with killing this indexing garbage on the work machine, bloody microsoft, disabled it and everything and every full moon it seems to come out and graze on my HDD platter.
From the MS article : This perfect storm is comprised of three forces joining together: hardware advancements, leaps in the amount of digitally born data, and the explosion of schemas and standards in information management.
Then I started to suspect they would rant about moores law and sure e-bloody-nough
Everyone knows Moore's law--the number of transistors on a chip doubles every 18 months. What a lot of people forget is that network bandwidth and storage technologies are growing at an even faster pace than Moore's law would suggest.
That is like saying, everyone knows the number 9 bus comes at half 3 on wednesdays, but noone expects 3 taxis sat there doing nothing at half past 3 on a tuesday.
Can we put this madness to rest? Ok back to the articles.
erm... lost track now....
Forgot (Score:3, Funny)
Shared data pools... (Score:4, Interesting)
Last Word? (Score:5, Funny)
Some snippets from the article (Score:3, Informative)
* Dynamic striping across all devices to maximize throughput
* Copy-on-write design makes most disk writes sequential
* Multiple block sizes, automatically chosen to match workload
* Explicit I/O priority with deadline scheduling
* Globally optimal I/O sorting and aggregation
* Multiple independent prefetch streams with automatic length and stride detection
* Unlimited, instantaneous read/write snapshots
* Parallel, constant-time directory operations
ZFS has some similarities to NetApp's WAFL in that it uses "copy on write".
One of the fun things with ZFS is that it automatically stripes across all the storage in your pool. Disk size doesn't matter - it's all used. This even works across SCSI and IDE.
One of the important things is that volume management isn't a seperate feature. Effectively, all the current limitations of volume managers are blown away:
Just as it dramatically eases the suffering of system administrators, ZFS offers relief for your company's bottom line. Because ZFS is built on top of virtual storage pools (unlike traditional file systems that require a separate volume manager), creating and deleting file systems is much less complex. Not only does this eliminate the need to pay for volume manager licenses and allow for single support contracts, it lowers administration costs and increases storage utilization.
ZFS appears to applications as a standard POSIX file system--no porting is required. But to administrators, it presents a pooled storage model that eliminates the antique concept of volumes, as well as all of the related partition management, provisioning, and file system sizing problems. Thousands--even millions--of file systems can all draw from ZFS' common storage pool, each one consuming only as much space as it needs. The combined I/O bandwidth of all of the devices in that storage pool is always available to each file system.
This is also part of the stuff making admin and configuration far far simpler. The thing I like is that it should be far harder to go wrong with ZFS (not available in Solaris Express yet so I haven't seen this for myself).
The very high degree of reliability as standard is very welcome too:
Data can be corrupted in a number of ways, such as a system error or an unexpected power outage, but ZFS removes this fear of the unknown. ZFS prevents data corruption by keeping data self-consistent at all times. All operations are transactional. This not only maintains consistency but also removes almost all of the constraints on I/O order and allows changes to succeed or fail as a whole.
All operations are also copy-on-write. Live data is never overwritten. ZFS writes data to a new block before changing the data pointers and committing the write. Copy-on-write provides several benefits:
* Always-valid on-disk state
* Consistent, reliable backups
* Data rollback to known point in time
"We validate the entire I/O stack, start to finish, no guesswork involved. It's all provable data integrity," says Bonwick.
Administrators will never again have to run laborious recovery procedures, such as fsck, even if the system is shut down in an unclean fashion. In fact, Solaris Kernel engineers Bill Moore and Matt Ahrens have subjected ZFS to more than a million forced, violent crashes in the course of their testing. Not once has ZFS lost data integrity or leaked a single block.
For more technical info see Matt Ahrens's [sun.com] and Val Henson's [sun.com] blogs - since they're among the engineers who worked on it.
Actually, Novell already made ZFS... (Score:3, Informative)
Novell now Novell Storage System (I think it used to be NetWare Storage System).
Apart from the obvious fact that SUN didnt manage to be very original in naming their filesystem, its noteworthy that Novell is porting their ZFS - now NSS - to Linux. It'll be part of Novell Open Enterprise Server - on both Linux and NetWare kernels.
From the top of my mind, here are some features of NSS that SUN needs to exceed to qualify for a new "final word..":
- Background compression
- Fast on-demand decompression
- Transactions
- Pluggable Name spaces
- Pluggable protocols (ie. http, nfs, etc)
- Advanced Access control model with inheritance, rights filters, etc. integrated with directory service (duh!)
- Quotas on user, group, directory level
- 64-bit (ok, SUN obviously got that one)
- mini-volumes
- journaled
- etc.
oh well, I wont bother continuing, but its worth looking out for NSS. Hopefully Novell will open source it and not make it exclusive to their distros.
There are a lot of cluster file systems (Score:5, Informative)
Right now there are a lot of file systems that do somehing not all that different than what Sun is proposing. The project [nersc.gov] I am on is evaluating them as we speak for a center wide filesystem. I've had the fun (no sarcasm, honestly) of setting up a number of different onces and helping to run benchmarks and tests against each. All of them have strengths. Every single one of them has some nasty weaknesses.
If you are looking for an open source based cluster file system, Lustre [lustre.org] is what you want. It's supported by LLNL, PNNL, and the main writers at ClusterFS Inc [clusterfs.com]. It's a network based cluster FS. We've been using it over GigE. However, we've found that there needs to be a ratio of 3:1 for data server:clients for a ratio. Wehave only used one metadata server. Failover isn't the greatest. Quotas don't exist. it also makes kernel mods (some good and bad) to do a mild fork of the linux kernel (they put them into the newer kernels every so often). It only runs on Linux. Getting it to run on anything else looks...scary.
GPFS [ibm.com] runs on AIX and Linux. Even sharing the same storage. It runs and is pretty stable. it has the option to run in a SAN mode or network based FS. In the latter form, it even does local discovery of disks via labels so that if a client can see the disks locally it will read and write to them via FC rather than to the server. It, however, is a balkanized mess. It requires a lot more work to bring up and run: there is an awful lot of software to configure to get it to run (re: RSCT. If you haven't had the joys of HATS and HAGS, count yourself very, very lucky).
ADIC's StorNext [adic.com] software is another option. This one is good if you are interested in ease of installation, maintanence, and very, very fast speeds (damn near line speed on Fibre channel). I have set this one up for sharing disks in less than two hours from first install to getting numerous assorted nodes of different OS's to play together (Solaris, AIX, Linux). It freakin on virtually everything from Crays to Linux to Windows. It's issues seem to be scaling (right now doesn't go past 256 clients) and it has some nontrivial locking issues (righting to the same block from multiple clients, and parallel I/O to the same file from multiple clients if you change the file size).
There are some others that are not as mature. Among them are Ibrix [ibrix.com], Panasas [panasas.com], GFS [redhat.com], and IBM's SANFS [ibm.com]. All of them are interesting or promising. Only SANF looks like it runs on more than Linux though at this point. Our requirements for the project I am on are to share the same FS and storage instance among disparate client OSes simultaneously. This might not be the same for others though and these might be worth a look. Lustre dodges this because its open source and they're interested in porting.
Re:There are a lot of cluster file systems (Score:4, Informative)
You also may want to check out the ASM [oracle.com] (Automated Storage Manager). It only works for disks that Oracle manages, but it does some pretty cool automatic load-balancing and RAIDing.
Disclaimer: :-)
Yes, I do work for ORCL.
No, I do not work on either OCFS or ASM (but I have partied with those guys
The proof is in the pudding (Score:4, Informative)
The proof is in the pudding. Let Sun release it and administrators use it for a year or two, then we'll see if it's good enough. Right now I'm having doubts it's as good as they want you to believe.
Boil the oceans, eh? (Score:3, Funny)
Well...I never really like the oceans anyways. They were always so wet.
Re:not alphabetically (Score:5, Funny)
Re:rearchitected (Score:4, Funny)
Re:fileless systems (Score:3, Funny)
SELECT * FROM storage WHERE path = '/home/gorbachev/.cshrc'
Re:fileless systems (Score:5, Interesting)
Convenient, and flawed.
XML isn't designed to handle changing data. It's designed to be a data markup language, which indicates it's used for presenting data, not managing data.
So far, the relational model is the best mathematically-rigorous method of managing sets of data. There are many advantages to hierarchical data representation, but for manipulation, the relational still trumps.
Do I want to use SQL to access my files? Not if I don't have to. There are perhaps better methods, even some transparent methods.
But, do I want to continue to self-organize my data? Hell, no! There's just too much information stored on my computer, and on my network, these days. And, considering that much of my data has multiple relationships, the hierarchical model is growing a bit long in the tooth. Many of my documents belong in multiple hierarchies.
But, there might be a real solution soon:
Gnome Storage [gnome.org] looks to be a good first step.