I personally think of a small DIY rack stuffed with commodity HDDs off Ebay with an LVM spanned across a bunch of RAID1s. I don’t want any complex architectural solutions since my homelab’s scale always equals 1. To my current understanding this has little to no obvious drawbacks. What do you think?

    • MrModest@lemmy.world
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      1 month ago

      Why btrfs and not ZFS? In my info bubble, the btrfs has a reputation of an unstable FS and people ended up with unrecoverable data.

      • non_burglar@lemmy.world
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        1 month ago

        That is apparently not the case anymore, but ZFS is certainly more rich in features and more battle-tested.

      • ikidd@lemmy.world
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        1 month ago

        Just the 5-6 raid modes are shit. And its weird willingness to let you boot a failed raid without letting you know a drive is borked.

      • squinky@sh.itjust.works
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        1 month ago

        All I know about ZFS is that there are weird patent or closed source encumbrances or something. I hear it’s good, and it seems popular, I just avoid proprietary Oracle products.

        As for btrfs, the only thing that’s claimed to be unstable is raid 5 or 6. And people use it in production saying the claims are overblown. I don’t. I use it in raid1 mode. But raid1 in btrfs doesn’t require a bunch of matching drives. It lets you glom together a number of mismatched disks and just puts every block on more than one of them. So it’s a nice cross between a raid and LFS or JBOD.

        • MrModest@lemmy.world
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          15 days ago

          There’s a thing called OpenZFS. With ZFS happened almost the same thing as with Java. Oracle bought a company and tried to close ZFS, but people just reimplemented ZFS under a FOSS licence and community. I don’t know who uses Oracle ZFS nowadays. Everyone uses OpenZFS.

          It’s true that there’s some licence incompatibility that doesn’t allow integrate OpenZFS into a Linux core, but it’s not like ZFS is proprietary

          https://openzfs.github.io/openzfs-docs/License.html

          While both (OpenZFS and Linux Kernel) are free open source licenses they are restrictive licenses. The combination of them causes problems