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[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]Re: [tlug] Raid5 box & backup
- Date: Mon, 26 May 2008 05:03:23 +0200
- From: Christian Horn <chorn@example.com>
- Subject: Re: [tlug] Raid5 box & backup
- References: <48389DF4.4050200@raoult.com> <b4d277190805242150u778a7e9x336055ccf64e9843@mail.gmail.com> <20080525101552.GA26875@fluxcoil.net> <48394FE5.7000504@raoult.com> <20080526003744.GA28494@fluxcoil.net> <20080526013750.GD6172@lucky.cynic.net> <20080526015826.GA28615@fluxcoil.net> <20080526021810.GE6172@lucky.cynic.net>
- User-agent: Mutt/1.5.13 (2006-08-11)
On Mon, May 26, 2008 at 11:18:10AM +0900, Curt Sampson wrote: > On 2008-05-26 03:58 +0200 (Mon), Christian Horn wrote: > > > The journaling filesystem is another layer and stores everything in the > > container-file while nfs/smb would work filewise. > > You seem to consider "extra layers" to be a more than a very, very > minimal potential source of file read/write errors, which is certainly > not the case. Ah, was just considering to implement those layers on the users computers over the provides nfs/smb instead of just the two storage-boxen. Had the complexity of the setup on each operating system in mind, thats simpler using the 2 boxes. > Consider that the journalling filesystem has much better recovery than > NFS or SMB when a network connection is broken in the middle of a file > update. > > > Indeed, nice idea, that way rsync would finish faster. The "combine > > blocks"-software had to be evailable on mac/win/linux in this case > > thou.... > > No, you can build a dozen block devices on the server, concatenate them > to one block device on the server, and export that one block device over > the network. Ok, had just the users computer in mind. > > Also rsync could probably be reworked to handle big file in breaking > > them into pieces and checksuming/transferring if needed those. > > Rsync alredy does exactly that; it's part of the whole point of rsync. > However, as I pointed out earlier, rsync has to read all of every file > with a changed timestamp, on both ends of the connection, with every > sync. If that file is a hundred gigs in size, that means at a minimum > 100 GB of reads and hashes at each end. With a modern disk, assuming the > hash uses minimal CPU, that's still a good 30 minutes of clock time, not > to mention trashing the I/O performance of the system for that time. Right, thats checking modify-time of files vs. grokking their data to get the hash. Christian
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