Revisiting ZFS and FreeNAS in 2019
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@xrobau said in Revisiting ZFS and FreeNAS in 2019:
As I said originally - the only way that is true is if you had identical cards with identical firmware versions on standby. That's perfectly fine for an EMC sized company, but it's not fine for anyone with only 200 or 300 spindles. I've had multiple P410i's refuse to import a RAID that was generated with a different version of firmware. This is not something uncommon, this is something that happens ALL THE TIME.
I do a lot of work in the SMB space and even companies with just one server have no issue with this. This isn't a problem in the real world. Unless you are running ancient hardware that is out of support and the supply chains no longer carry the old hardware. Seriously, even several generations old gear, getting a matching or even just supported hardware RAID card is totally trivial from every enterprise vendor.
You seem to be running into problems that are very far outside of the norm. No one with HPE, Dell, Lenovo, IBM, or similar is running into these issues. No one with third party enterprise cards is, either. All it takes is a server support contract, or just a good vendor like PCM and you are covered.
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OK, so you're obviously just trolling now. I've asked you nicely 4 times to stop spamming, and you're going out of your way to do it.
So fine, you win. I will not talk about ZFS here. You can say whatever you want, and I won't correct you. Enjoy.
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@xrobau said in Revisiting ZFS and FreeNAS in 2019:
Hardware RAID is slower, and more finnicky, and provides less visibility of individual platters than software RAID. For example, can a standard hardware RAID card provide access to SMART data of each drive? (No).
Again, stating that it is slower, when we've said that slower doesn't matter as they are "so close" in speed, makes it sound like you are trying to make us forget what the real issues are.
And yes, you most certainly can see the SMART data on enterprise controllers. Here is an example:
http://john.cuppi.net/view-smartctl-data-of-hard-disks-for-dell-perc-and-lsi-megaraid/
No business class hardware RAID doesn't provide this data. If you've seen the problems you are reporting, it means either you've been using FakeRAID or have non-business class controllers. In which case, yes, you'd expect all kinds of problems like you mention. Same would be true for using some kid's experimental software RAID. Anything bad and broken is bad and broken. But just because you've not been using proper hardware RAID doesn't mean it's bad or doesn't do what needs to be done.
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@xrobau said in Revisiting ZFS and FreeNAS in 2019:
OK, so you're obviously just trolling now. I've asked you nicely 4 times to stop spamming, and you're going out of your way to do it.
And I explained before you asked why a wall of text is unprofessional and impolite and you proved it to be true. So just because you demand something ridiculous doesn't imply that I have to act like a jerk and do it.
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@xrobau said in Revisiting ZFS and FreeNAS in 2019:
So fine, you win. I will not talk about ZFS here. You can say whatever you want, and I won't correct you. Enjoy.
Again, you're kidding, right? Do you remember the discussion that we just had where you weren't familiar with any tenant of how RAID works? You've been belligerent and braggadocios about how you are the subject matter expert, but have demonstrated a lack of basic knowledge and familiarity that would suggest that you'd fail an A+ exam. This stuff is ridiculously basic and you are acting like not knowing the fundamentals doesn't matter because somehow you can be an expert without even a passing knowledge of what RAID is? This makes no sense.
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@xrobau said in Revisiting ZFS and FreeNAS in 2019:
FreeNAS is just a wrapper for ZFS, with all the tools everyone needs built in.
This is a bizarre statement. FreeNAS is a complete software appliance that includes a full OS, loads of utilities, lots of bloat, unneeded parts that can (and have) led to dataloss, and only really brings value to people who don't understand ZFS and the OS on their own. Knowing enough ZFS to be safe with it would make FreeNAS' interface be "in the way".
FreeNAS is way, way more than a wrapper on ZFS. And a wrapper on ZFS would be a bad idea - as has been covered.
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@xrobau said in Revisiting ZFS and FreeNAS in 2019:
ZFS is, unfortunately for those that are trying to make a living in the HARDWARE RAID space, a significant nail in their coffin. I brought up a whole bunch of things where your statements were wrong, or misleading, or in some cases totally irrelevant.
Um, ZFS has been around since 2005 and has had no effect on the hardware space. It has no significant affect. I feel like you just read about ZFS and have never seen how servers are really used and purchased. Tell VMware that they no longer have a working system because they use hardware RAID and don't support ZFS. They will laugh at you pretty heavily.
You claimed a bunch of my statements were wrong, but you've provided no support for any of those claims. You use brow beating, but don't actually state why your wild claims are true. And all of the "true bits" in your claims seem to be things pulled out of my own articles - like stating that sofware RAID is faster, something I have championed more than anyone for 19 years now. But, I also point out that being faster doesn't matter 99%+ of the time, so bringing it up isn't refuting anything, it just highlights that what is important is being missed (or at least ignored.)
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@xrobau said in Revisiting ZFS and FreeNAS in 2019:
In retrospect, from your comments, it seems that that you make a living from hardware RAID, so it's somewhat unsurprising that you're trying to spread a pile of FUD on ZFS. Comments like 'people say it's magic' are just casting dispersion on it, purely to disparage it without that meaning anything.
Oh yeah, THAT'S the take away here. And this in a thread where you personally claimed and continue to claim even after we proved you didn't understand even what is was that ZFS had magic properties that defined storage laws and did things that were impossible and that that was why it was so much better than RAID. You proved the point, in this thread, that you claim I made up.
You also showed how, even when presented with a list of the myths, you were so ready to defend those myths and ready to attack anyone that didn't support your pet project that you didn't even bother to learn about the myths and figure out what a plausible claim would look like and just demonstrated how people using FreeNAS and ZFS do so out of emotion and don't understand what they are doing.
We ended the first part of the discussion with the discovery that you literally don't know what ZFS is. I think you are trying to claim that even though you were completely unclear as to what it fundamentally is that you are still the expert on it.
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@xrobau said in Revisiting ZFS and FreeNAS in 2019:
I'm trying to get across a REALLY COMPLEX thing
It might seem that way to you. But yelling that something is complex doesn't make it so. RAID is actually really simple. I would encourage you to check out this video that helps to explain it: https://mangolassi.it/topic/19511/
If you are new to storage these concepts might seem overwhelming. Storage is tough for everyone at first. But remaining calm, assuming that people who use this all the time (and teach it) might have some good insight for you, and starting from the basics and building up will make it actually clear that the concepts are very simple. RAID is easy when you learn how it works. You've experience the frustration of trying to skip understanding it and just memorizing words and facts and numbers; it might help you pass a class test quickly but if you get anything wrong, you won't know and you can skew off very quickly.
If you take the time and learn what RAID is and how it works, it makes it impossible to have the kinds of challenges you are seeing. If you knew what RAID was and how the math works, there is no way to have someone fool you into thinking that ZFS isn't RAID if you know how ZFS works, for example. And thinking that copies could replace parity and still scale like parity - obviously if you think about it that can't be how it works. Or saying ZRAID8, when the highest level is RAIDZ3.
So start with the basics, once you know what RAID is, it'll make these things easier and you'll see that it really isn't complex. It's just a few basic concepts to master like what parity is, how multiple parity interact, how mirroring and striping work, how you can nest, etc. It all just builds.
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@xrobau said in Revisiting ZFS and FreeNAS in 2019:
And ZFS is so portable that I can literally pull the drives from a FreeNAS box, plug them into an Ubuntu machine, run 'zfs import' and all my data is there. Can you do that when you move your HDDs from a HP to a Dell to an IBM?
If I'm using any enterprise software RAID, or any matching hardware RAID system... absolutely, yes I can. But obviously wouldn't want to even with ZFS.
But let's not forget what a completely dumb idea this would be and that this is not an operational process. I realize you are desperately trying to figure out something that makes ZFS special. This definitely isn't it.
Pulling a bunch of drives from one system and moving them to another isn't really how businesses work. It sounds neat in a lab and in a class room a professor whose never really worked in IT might envision people would do this all of the time. But in the real world, this is just crazy stuff. Neat tech, sure, but everyone has it and no one uses it. The only difference is that in the ZFS / FreeNAS world people talk about this stuff as a "feature", and in the rest of the world we know that actually doing this is foolish and isn't something to talk about.
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@scottalanmiller said in Revisiting ZFS and FreeNAS in 2019:
But good news, Google now ranks us the very top hit for ZRAID8 Literally, since this is the first place it has ever been mentioned.
Hahahhaha that just made my month!
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@xrobau said in Revisiting ZFS and FreeNAS in 2019:
This is where the zraid stuff scales. You can have a ZRAID8 for example (requiring 9 or more disks), where there are 8 copies of the data. Literal copies. The data is replicated onto those disks. There are no parity calculations, as there are with RAID5 and 6.
So, as long as you can get the idea of parity out of your mind, suddenly the zraid stuff makes sense.This is where it was really off of the rails. All of the details in this explanation of a system that doesn't exist. Tons of "and because of this... this other weird stuff". Raving about this "literal copies" stuff, and some eight way system, the new ZRAID name, something that requires nine disks... so many false features. This wasn't casually getting mirroring and parity backwards, an entire new product world was built in his head around this fantasy he had concocted. There must be six made up things just in this one statement that all are required for the other to exist.
- ZRAID (made up term)
- ZRAID8 (ignore the ZRAID bit, there is no RAID with the number 8 in it.)
- 8 copies of data. No RAID level does this except RAID 1, and that's just a mirror.
- 9 drives requires. Why nine? Who knows, but no RAID level has ever required that.
- Copies (the wrong term for mirror but whatever) instead of parity.
- Special scaling based on this made up technology.
Six discrete fantasy products, features, or requirements in one statement. There is, in fact, not a single factual thing in this description, not even buried in the subtext.
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@xrobau said in Revisiting ZFS and FreeNAS in 2019:
ZFS works on copies. So, when you write 1, 2, 3 and 4 to a zpool, you get something like this:
Disk 1: x 1 x 3 x
Disk 2: 1 x 2 x 3
Disk 3: x 1 2 x 4
Disk 4: 4 x 2 x 3
Disk 5: x x x x 4
Copies. Of. The. Data.And this, so much detail about made up products. Where did this all come from? It's like a whole novel about a fake storage technology had been written somewhere.
You know, I once was in a college class and one of the kids didn't know the difference between fiction and non-fiction and in a serious article on ethics they used the "Laws of Robots" from iRobot. This is like that, somewhere there must be some source for so much details, but what it refers to, we will never know.
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@xrobau said in Revisiting ZFS and FreeNAS in 2019:
As a bit of a rebuttal, you're kinda getting confused and claming FreeNAS is a bunch of things it isn't. In fact, in that 'common myths' page is ... I dunno, random made up stuff?
@xrobau said in Revisiting ZFS and FreeNAS in 2019:
So, as a Solaris administrator from way back, let's go through a couple of the misapprehensions about ZFS in that document you linked!
@xrobau said in Revisiting ZFS and FreeNAS in 2019:
I am your guest ZFS expert! Ask me anything
@xrobau said in Revisiting ZFS and FreeNAS in 2019:
Truly, honestly, that's not how ZFS works. I cross my heart.
@xrobau said in Revisiting ZFS and FreeNAS in 2019:
Dude, I've been doing this for almost 30 years
@xrobau said in Revisiting ZFS and FreeNAS in 2019:
I got my Windows cert, and CCIE, and a bunch of other things before moving into DevOps. So, please - trust me when I say I know what I'm talking about.
@xrobau said in Revisiting ZFS and FreeNAS in 2019:
Honestly, this is where you are 100% wrong, and you refuse to listen to me.
@xrobau said in Revisiting ZFS and FreeNAS in 2019:
But telling me I'm wrong isn't going to get you anywhere, because I know what I'm talking about here. This is my field of expertise.
@xrobau said in Revisiting ZFS and FreeNAS in 2019:
Now, if you can take a breath, admit that you've learned something new about ZFS
@xrobau said in Revisiting ZFS and FreeNAS in 2019:
I've been using ZFS for 15 years now, and I'm extremely confident in my knowledge.
@xrobau said in Revisiting ZFS and FreeNAS in 2019:
I'm a sysadmin. I've done courses.
@xrobau said in Revisiting ZFS and FreeNAS in 2019:
I now have to quote multiple things, scroll backwards and forwards, and generally waste even more of my time.
@xrobau said in Revisiting ZFS and FreeNAS in 2019:
This is what frustrates me here - I know this stuff IN DEPTH
@xrobau said in Revisiting ZFS and FreeNAS in 2019:
you're trying to claim that you know this better than me, when you obviously don't. It's massively frustrating.
This is the greatest collection of "I'm smart and I'm an expert" statements I've ever seen. The more someone has to tell you how brilliant they are....
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This was painful to read
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@xrobau said in Revisiting ZFS and FreeNAS in 2019:
I've been using ZFS for 15 years now, and I'm extremely confident in my knowledge.
What's really funny is that after re-reading this thread, the most likely thing is that he's never used ZFS and doesn't even know what he has. There is no way he's been actually using ZFS for fifteen years. First, because there is no way someone has ever used it at all and knows so little about it. But second, because ZFS has existed for fifteen years
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@wirestyle22 said in Revisiting ZFS and FreeNAS in 2019:
This was painful to read
TRUE! Wow... some serious lack of BASIC I.T. Knowledge...
**@xrobau said in Revisiting ZFS and FreeNAS in 2019:
I'm a sysadmin. I've done courses**
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@CCWTech said in Revisiting ZFS and FreeNAS in 2019:
@wirestyle22 said in Revisiting ZFS and FreeNAS in 2019:
This was painful to read
TRUE! Wow... some serious lack of BASIC I.T. Knowledge...
Eh, I don't really care about that. We are all in a constant state of learning. I'm not in a position to judge anyone and wouldn't if I were
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@wirestyle22 said in Revisiting ZFS and FreeNAS in 2019:
@CCWTech said in Revisiting ZFS and FreeNAS in 2019:
@wirestyle22 said in Revisiting ZFS and FreeNAS in 2019:
This was painful to read
TRUE! Wow... some serious lack of BASIC I.T. Knowledge...
Eh, I don't really care about that. We are all in a constant state of learning. I'm not in a position to judge anyone
Right, but claiming to be an expert and putting this as a basis of being an expert is laughable.
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@wirestyle22 said in Revisiting ZFS and FreeNAS in 2019:
@CCWTech said in Revisiting ZFS and FreeNAS in 2019:
@wirestyle22 said in Revisiting ZFS and FreeNAS in 2019:
This was painful to read
TRUE! Wow... some serious lack of BASIC I.T. Knowledge...
Eh, I don't really care about that. We are all in a constant state of learning. I'm not in a position to judge anyone
Lacking basic knowledge is not bad. Lacking the most basic knowledge while repeatedly berating other people and claiming to be a domain expert so cover up a long series of lies is the issue.