On Thu, May 04, 2006 at 12:16:28PM -0500, Sidney Cammeresi wrote: > We don't have a lot of data, we mostly just need more spindles. So we'd > want 12-14 disks, size isn't a big deal, like 2-4TB should be plenty. You can probably get something like an HP MSA 1000 for not a lot of money. We've got an older one here that we used for Exchange - it has 3 shelves of 14 72GB drives each - around 3TB total. A lot of spindles though. > We also want a vendor who will `get' Linux and won't whine that we aren't > running Redhat CoreFrobozz 45.2 on a WhizzBang 3000 machine because that's > the ONLY thing they'll support at all. Not that we expect to need a > lot of support, I just have a low tolerance for bullshit. Most SAN vendors have a low tolerance for customers who run fast and loose with kernels, drivers, and firmware. This isn't SCSI and the standards are a bit of challenge. You can expect a very limited support matrix. Admittedly I've only played with the big boys - EMC, HP, McData, and Brocade, but they've all sung the same song. You can get a bit looser if you go with a NAS solution instead since then you're playing by the NFS or CIFS protocols. You will find Linux support from the big companies but generally it's the big distros - Red Hat and SuSe that are supported (e.g. qualified). If you ask me, I'll tell you to run Red Hat Enterprise Linux and an HP SAN. I know it will work though, since I've put them into production. .../Ed -- Ed Wilts, RHCE Mounds View, MN, USA mailto:ewilts at ewilts.org Member #1, Red Hat Community Ambassador Program