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Special Forums Hardware Filesystems, Disks and Memory Clustered filesystem which one to pick Post 303003018 by jokken on Wednesday 6th of September 2017 03:11:50 PM
Old 09-06-2017
Clustered filesystem which one to pick

Hi all,

I'm a bit new to advanced filesystem types. I've just only learned that if you wish to share a single fibre channel extent with many servers you need to use a clustered filesystem to prevent data corruption.

looking through a list of clustered file systems I saw gfs2 which I thought might be a good one to use. but is it the best for what I need or want to do?

I have a large 7TB fibre channel extent which is accessible by 14+ servers on the fibre channel network. I'd like each server to be able to use this storage space for the vHDs of their running VMs. I don't want to split up this 7TB into 500GB vdisks so each server can have a slice.

So I understand I need a special filesystem to do this. what would you recommend?

If it is an important detail I'll mention these 14 servers are Openstack Newton Nova/Compute nodes. (Ubuntu 16.04.3LTS)

my guess is I would have to format the drive as GFS2 from one of the 14 servers and then gfs mount it from all 14 servers

please let me know what you think of GFS2
or comment on what I' doing.
I'll gladly supply more info on my setup if you need it!

thx!

Last edited by rbatte1; 09-07-2017 at 04:52 AM.. Reason: Spelling
 

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ZFSLOADER(8)						    BSD System Manager's Manual 					      ZFSLOADER(8)

NAME
zfsloader -- kernel bootstrapping final stage DESCRIPTION
zfsloader is an extended variant of loader(8) with added support for booting from ZFS. This document describes only differences from loader(8). ZFS FEATURES
zfsloader supports the following format for specifying ZFS filesystems which can be used wherever loader(8) refers to a device specification: zfs:pool/filesystem: where pool/filesystem is a ZFS filesystem name as described in zfs(8). If /etc/fstab does not have an entry for the root filesystem and vfs.root.mountfrom is not set, but currdev refers to a ZFS filesystem, then zfsloader will instruct kernel to use that filesystem as the root filesystem. ZFS COMMAND EXTENSIONS
lsdev [-v] Lists ZFS pools in addition to disks and partitions. Adding -v shows more ZFS pool details in a format that resembles zpool status output. lszfs filesystem A ZFS extended command that can be used to explore the ZFS filesystem hierarchy in a pool. Lists the immediate children of the filesystem. The filesystem hierarchy is rooted at a filesystem with the same name as the pool. FILES
/boot/zfsloader zfsloader itself. EXAMPLES
Set the default device used for loading a kernel from a ZFS filesystem: set currdev=zfs:tank/ROOT/knowngood: SEE ALSO
gptzfsboot(8), loader(8), zfs(8), zfsboot(8), zfsloader(8), zpool(8) HISTORY
The zfsloader first appeared in FreeBSD 7.3. AUTHORS
This manual page was written by Andriy Gapon <avg@FreeBSD.org>. BSD
September 15, 2014 BSD
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