Tuesday, May 4, 2010
Lots of information about ZFS and storage
Saturday, May 1, 2010
Tuesday, January 12, 2010
Wednesday, December 16, 2009
You will find here an excellent talk with Josh Paetzel from iXsystems about the future of FreeNAS. Many thanks for this information!
Episode about the future of FreeNAS on bsdtalk
Episode about the future of FreeNAS on bsdtalk
You will find here an excellent talk with Josh Paetzel from iXsystems about the future of FreeNAS. Many thanks for this information!
Labels:
freenas
Saturday, December 5, 2009
Olivier left me here a comment...
The FreeNAS project will continue to use FreeBSD in the future! This sounds excellent! Please read the original message on the blog and forum post.
Here is a copy of the message:
Hi all,
FreeNAS needs some big modification for removing its present limitation (one of the biggest is the non support of easly users add-ons).
We think that a full-rewriting of the FreeNAS base is needed. From this idea, we will take 2 differents paths:
FreeNAS needs some big modification for removing its present limitation (one of the biggest is the non support of easly users add-ons).
We think that a full-rewriting of the FreeNAS base is needed. From this idea, we will take 2 differents paths:
- Volker will create a new project called "'OpenMediaVault" based on a GNU/Linux using all its experience acquired with all its nights and week-ends spent to improve FreeNAS during the last 2 years. He still continue to work on FreeNAS (and try to share its time with this 2 projects).
- And, a great surprise: iXsystems, a company specialized in professional FreeBSD offers to take FreeNAS under their wings as an open source community driven project. This mean that they will involve their professionals FreeBSD developers to FreeNAS! Their manpower will permit to do a full-rewriting of FreeNAS.
Personally, I come back to actively work in FreeNAS and begin to upgrade it to FreeBSD 8.0 (that is "production ready" for ZFS).
So we will see 'more' developers working on FreeNAS. Excellent!
The NEW Future of FreeNAS...
The NEW Future of FreeNAS...
Olivier left me here a comment...
The FreeNAS project will continue to use FreeBSD in the future! This sounds excellent! Please read the original message on the blog and forum post.
Here is a copy of the message:
Hi all,
FreeNAS needs some big modification for removing its present limitation (one of the biggest is the non support of easly users add-ons).
We think that a full-rewriting of the FreeNAS base is needed. From this idea, we will take 2 differents paths:
FreeNAS needs some big modification for removing its present limitation (one of the biggest is the non support of easly users add-ons).
We think that a full-rewriting of the FreeNAS base is needed. From this idea, we will take 2 differents paths:
- Volker will create a new project called "'OpenMediaVault" based on a GNU/Linux using all its experience acquired with all its nights and week-ends spent to improve FreeNAS during the last 2 years. He still continue to work on FreeNAS (and try to share its time with this 2 projects).
- And, a great surprise: iXsystems, a company specialized in professional FreeBSD offers to take FreeNAS under their wings as an open source community driven project. This mean that they will involve their professionals FreeBSD developers to FreeNAS! Their manpower will permit to do a full-rewriting of FreeNAS.
Personally, I come back to actively work in FreeNAS and begin to upgrade it to FreeBSD 8.0 (that is "production ready" for ZFS).
So we will see 'more' developers working on FreeNAS. Excellent!
Monday, November 23, 2009
Since FreeNAS 0.7 it is easy to configure TimeMachine to use a AFP share (like Apple's Time Capsule)... Here is a short howto :-)
First step: Configure FreeNAS
-> Enable AFP
-> Enable AFP
-> Configure the share
- Automatic disk discovery - Enable automatic disk dicovery
- Automatic disk discovery mode - Time Machine
Second Step: Configure OSX Time Machine
-> Select System Preferences -> Time Machine
-> Select System Preferences -> Time Machine
-> Select Backup Disk
-> and Authenticate
Thats it!


Your FreeNAS will work now similar than a TimeCapsule. Enjoy! Details can be found here...
I've combined this with ZFS. With two clients and regular backups since two months, I have here a compression (gzip) enabled volume with 238 GByte. The compression ratio (compressratio) is at 1.24x
freenas:~# zfs get compressratio data0/timemachine
NAME PROPERTY VALUE SOURCE
data0/timemachine compressratio 1.24x -
Instead of 295 GByte, only 238 GBytes are used. IMHO this is great :-)




Your FreeNAS will work now similar than a TimeCapsule. Enjoy! Details can be found here...
I've combined this with ZFS. With two clients and regular backups since two months, I have here a compression (gzip) enabled volume with 238 GByte. The compression ratio (compressratio) is at 1.24x
freenas:~# zfs get compressratio data0/timemachine
NAME PROPERTY VALUE SOURCE
data0/timemachine compressratio 1.24x -
Instead of 295 GByte, only 238 GBytes are used. IMHO this is great :-)
If you want to see how to do a complete restore of your system, please see my new blogpost "Mac OS X system restore using time machine and FreeNAS"
Mac OSX Time Machine and FreeNAS 0.7
Mac OSX Time Machine and FreeNAS 0.7
Since FreeNAS 0.7 it is easy to configure TimeMachine to use a AFP share (like Apple's Time Capsule)... Here is a short howto :-)
First step: Configure FreeNAS
-> Enable AFP
-> Enable AFP
-> Configure the share
- Automatic disk discovery - Enable automatic disk dicovery
- Automatic disk discovery mode - Time Machine
Second Step: Configure OSX Time Machine
-> Select System Preferences -> Time Machine
-> Select System Preferences -> Time Machine
-> Select Backup Disk
-> and Authenticate
Thats it!


Your FreeNAS will work now similar than a TimeCapsule. Enjoy! Details can be found here...
I've combined this with ZFS. With two clients and regular backups since two months, I have here a compression (gzip) enabled volume with 238 GByte. The compression ratio (compressratio) is at 1.24x
freenas:~# zfs get compressratio data0/timemachine
NAME PROPERTY VALUE SOURCE
data0/timemachine compressratio 1.24x -
Instead of 295 GByte, only 238 GBytes are used. IMHO this is great :-)




Your FreeNAS will work now similar than a TimeCapsule. Enjoy! Details can be found here...
I've combined this with ZFS. With two clients and regular backups since two months, I have here a compression (gzip) enabled volume with 238 GByte. The compression ratio (compressratio) is at 1.24x
freenas:~# zfs get compressratio data0/timemachine
NAME PROPERTY VALUE SOURCE
data0/timemachine compressratio 1.24x -
Instead of 295 GByte, only 238 GBytes are used. IMHO this is great :-)
If you want to see how to do a complete restore of your system, please see my new blogpost "Mac OS X system restore using time machine and FreeNAS"
Sunday, November 22, 2009
- CryptoNAS (http://cryptonas.org/) - Free
- EON (http://sites.google.com/site/eonstorage/, Blog http://eonstorage.blogspot.com/) - Free
- EuroNAS (http://euronas.de/web/index.php) - Commercial
- FreeNAS (http://www.freenas.org/) - Free
- Napp-it (http://www.napp-it.org/) - Free
- NASLite (http://www.serverelements.com/naslite.php) - Commercial
- NexentaStor (http://www.nexenta.com/) - Commercial (Developer Edition is restricted to 4TB)
- Open-E (http://www.open-e.com/) - Commercial (Lite Version is restricted to 2TB)
- OpenFiler (http://www.openfiler.com/) - Free (Commercial support is available)
- PulsarOS (http://pulsaros.digitalplayground.at/) - Free (?), not released yet
- UnRAID (http://www.lime-technology.com) - Commercial (Basic Version is restricted to 3 Drives)
Do you have any experiences with one of those?
Overview of NAS Operation Systems
Overview of NAS Operation Systems
- CryptoNAS (http://cryptonas.org/) - Free
- EON (http://sites.google.com/site/eonstorage/, Blog http://eonstorage.blogspot.com/) - Free
- EuroNAS (http://euronas.de/web/index.php) - Commercial
- FreeNAS (http://www.freenas.org/) - Free
- Napp-it (http://www.napp-it.org/) - Free
- NASLite (http://www.serverelements.com/naslite.php) - Commercial
- NexentaStor (http://www.nexenta.com/) - Commercial (Developer Edition is restricted to 4TB)
- Open-E (http://www.open-e.com/) - Commercial (Lite Version is restricted to 2TB)
- OpenFiler (http://www.openfiler.com/) - Free (Commercial support is available)
- PulsarOS (http://pulsaros.digitalplayground.at/) - Free (?), not released yet
- UnRAID (http://www.lime-technology.com) - Commercial (Basic Version is restricted to 3 Drives)
Do you have any experiences with one of those?
Labels:
freenas,
general,
linux,
opensolaris
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