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:Storage Basics: Clustered File Systems
Storage Basics: Clustered File Systems
Aug 18, 2009, 22 :32 UTC (0 Talkback[s]) (3304 reads)

(Other stories by Charlie Schluting)

[ Thanks to Paul Shread for this link. ]

"Shared-disk configurations are most common in the Fibre Channel SAN and iSCSI worlds. It is quite simple to configure storage systems so that multiple servers can see the same logical block device, or LUN, but without a clustered file system, chaos will ensue if both try to use it at the same time. This problem is dealt with by using clustered file systems, which we will cover in a moment.

"Generally speaking, shared disk setups have a single point of failure: the storage system. This is not always true, however, as "shared disk" is a confusing term with today's technology. SANs, NAS appliances and commodity hardware running Linux can all replicate the underlying disks in real time to another storage node, which provides a simulated shared disk environment. Since the underlying block devices are replicated, the nodes have access to the same data and both run a clustered file system, but this replication breaks the traditional shared disk definition."

Complete Story

Related Stories:
Simple Linux HA Clustering(Aug 16, 2009)
InfiniBand Marches On Without Cisco(Aug 14, 2009)
"Penguin on Demand" Extends Cloud Computing(Aug 12, 2009)
Roaring Penguin Software announces support for IPv6 (Aug 07, 2009)
Clusters That Produce: 25 Open HPC Applications(Jul 14, 2009)
Free O'Reilly Webcast: An Introduction to Hadoop(Jul 10, 2009)
Distributed Replicated Storage Across Four Storage Nodes With GlusterFS On Debia(Jul 08, 2009)
Get to Know Clustered File Systems(Jul 02, 2009)
Achieving Robust Clustered Storage with Linux and GFS (Jun 26, 2009)



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