[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

I have 3 datacentres connected by 12 core gig fibre (only using one pair
at the moment, but the fibre is there for future use) each connected
directly to the others.  I want a system that I can start off with one
disk server in one datacentre, and then step it up to have mirrored disk
servers in each of the other datacentre's which are kept up to date in
real time and can take over instantaneously if one of the others fails.

It must also be scalable (non destructive resizing of the system) and
support both linux and FreeBSD.  I am willing to wait for this, but can
anyone point me in the right direction.  iSCSI seems to be it, but I'm
not sure.
all, don't get network attached storage confused with network attached filesystem confused with clustered filesystem.

if you go for fibre channel network attached storage, it dosen't matter if the host and storage array are in the same cabinet, across the room or in different data centers. if your requirement is only to have one host up at any time then it can raid1 3way mirror over the sites.

of course it gets really messy when one of the links goes down and you have to decide if it really has and not just the way your testing, who becomes master and enforce it so there's no corruption (if the "down" host continues writing).

you mention multiple cores and the datacenters connectected in a ring, which means you can multipath in both directions of the loop. don't know of any fc multipathing for freebsd.

doing this in iscsi will be a lot cheaper. switches will be gigE with fibre uplinks to connect the sites. targets and initiators can be regular boxes with more/less/none directly attached disks, all connected via gig nics. multipathing/link failures are handled by routing daemons/protocols which already exist.
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