Jeremy, Cohen, Kris, thanks to all of you.
Indeed after reading the Sandisk paper it shed a lot of light on this matter. The whole idea is to have a large scale system with no moving parts (we call a large system something with 250 users, at least down here ;-) )
the whole idea is for a custo
Jeremy McNamara wrote:
Tzafrir Cohen wrote:
> H, I'm not sure that this is exactly the data you're after.
You're looking for the ammounts of writes for the disk block that gets
the most writes.
E.g: for a standard ext3 filesystem, the journal area would probably
have very frequent writes,
Tzafrir Cohen wrote:
> H, I'm not sure that this is exactly the data you're after.
You're looking for the ammounts of writes for the disk block that gets
the most writes.
E.g: for a standard ext3 filesystem, the journal area would probably
have very frequent writes, whereas most of the sys
On Fri, Oct 06, 2006 at 05:10:34PM -0500, Erick Perez wrote:
> I understand Jeremy and Kris point of view (BTW Kris, astlinux rocks!!)
>
> However the main question was not aswered (or i didn't get it, did I ?)
>
> If I use a Disk on Module that has 2million hours MTBF and a Read/Write
> lifecycl
I understand Jeremy and Kris point of view (BTW Kris, astlinux rocks!!)
However the main question was not aswered (or i didn't get it, did I ?)
If I use a Disk on Module that has 2million hours MTBF and a Read/Write lifecycle of 2million times, then, How many days/weeks/months/years will take t
Let me chime on on Astlinux and my personal experience. I have used Astlinux in the following installations:
1) boot from CF on VIA platform, store config settings on USB key drive
2) boot from CD on P3-800, store config settings on USB key drive
3) boot from CF on Soekris Net4801, store co
On Fri, Oct 06, 2006 at 05:10:34PM -0500, Erick Perez wrote:
>Example: if I setup system XYZ with asterisk, then load this magical
>utility/procedure that counts how many writes the filesystem has done
>to / or to /,/tmp,/var and after 24 hours the utility/procedure says:
>10thousan
Kristian Kielhofner wrote:
Erick,
Or Just use AstLinux which kind of does what Jeremy described :)
http://www.astlinux.org
P.S. - I am the creator of AstLinux
--
Kristian Kielhofner
Sorry to reply to my own post, but there seems to have been some
confusion in what I said here.
Jeremy McNamara wrote:
Erick Perez wrote:
Hi,
Im doing some research for Disk on a Module (DOM) with asterisk
realtime. To have no moving parts for a special project, I know I can
use 3.5 or 2.5 HDDs but DOMs sound interesting.
Does someone have working experience with this?
Basically the A
Erick Perez wrote:
Hi,
Im doing some research for Disk on a Module (DOM) with asterisk
realtime. To have no moving parts for a special project, I know I can
use 3.5 or 2.5 HDDs but DOMs sound interesting.
Does someone have working experience with this?
Basically the Asterisk Realtime will be
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