Hi all, Got a number of replies and now I have a better idea about these issues. Bottom line: -> No certainty on the issue of using 72 gig scsi drives in the a1000 ; apparently there are cases where one can get away with swapping in larger (non-sun branded) disks into sun hardware environment and get away with it. No explicit answer from anyone who has done this with an A-1000 (either with sun-branded or not .. 72 gig disks). -> Feedback from a number of Quantum Snap users indicate that these boxes are essentially intel-hardware running pared-down linux-based OS with IDE hard drives and administration via a web-GUI. Some control is provided over directly editing users / groups files to provide decent integration of NFS shares. Clearly the target market of these products is more aimed at Windows environments based on observations on the quantum support pages, and the fact that the snap server can do "user management / authentication" against either an NT domain or a Novell NDS server. I cannot find evidence to indicate that "snapshot" features exist as robustly as those found in NetApp units (for example) although there is software available (extra) for use with Snap servers that will synch files between a "primary" and "backup" snap server (on a per-file basis) as a means towards maintaining a redundant / failover setup. (If I recieve feedback further clarifying the user:group NFS share issues significantly from Quantum tech support I may post an addendum to this summary in the future.) Bottom line for the SnapServer -- looks like it will do NFS shares `decently' despite being a product aimed at Windows users, but may not be suitable for environments where the disks get a brutal workout, and certainly isn't as feature-rich as some NAS devices avaiable (albeit typically at higher cost it seems). -> I did recieve glowing feedback from one site using a NetApp filer, stressing the importance of snapshot features, fast file access for web site content (MANY small files, with content growing at a quick rate), and suggesting that the quantum snap rig may not provide such snappy disk access (likely since snap is purely IDE whereas the NetApp was FCAL disk subsystem). Many thanks to those who replied to my query: John Littell Steve Hammond Don Mies Ryan McEwan Victor Karpovich ---Tim Chipman ----original questions follow---- (1) Does anyone know if the Sun A1000 will accept & use 72-gig SCSI disks? The specs pages indicate official support for 36 gig drives as the maximum per-drive capacity. Our sales rep mumbled something about 72gig disk support "eventually" at the start of the year. I'm just curious if anyone has actually installed larger format disks to see what happens. (ie, if they work!) (2) does anyone have experience with Quantum SnapServer 12000 NAS ? (as seen at the URL below) http://www.snapserver.com/products/12000/index.asp (model 12000 is the only one with a decent amount of storage really, IMHO). In particular I'm curious about user-management issues, ie, assuming you have NFS shares from the NAS-> Solaris boxes, is it relatively painless to setup users:groups on the NAS device which are similar (identical to?) those used on solaris .. ? For that matter, if anyone has any strong positive experiences with NAS devices I'm interested to hear. I do understand that NetApps are pretty decent but from what I can see the pricing isn't quite as competitive as for the quantum thing (which is $15k USD for 960gig raw storage or 750 gig in Raid5). However, maybe this is a case of "get what you pay for" ? Thanks very much!Received on Thu Oct 18 17:11:15 2001
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