<html><head><style type='text/css'>p { margin: 0; }</style></head><body><div style='font-family: arial,helvetica,sans-serif; font-size: 10pt; color: #000000'>That's why I'm making this questions, to demystify some buzzwords around here.<br>But if you have a strong and good technology why not create buzzwords to get into as many people as possible? without trapped them.<br>Share a disk containing "static" data is a good idea, do you know from where I can start?<br><br>Thanks<br>Jose<br><br><hr id="zwchr"><div style="color: rgb(0, 0, 0); font-weight: normal; font-style: normal; text-decoration: none; font-family: Helvetica,Arial,sans-serif; font-size: 12pt;"><b>From: </b>"Jiri Belka" <jbelka@redhat.com><br><b>To: </b>users@ovirt.org<br><b>Sent: </b>Terça-feira, 28 de Maio de 2013 12:05:11<br><b>Subject: </b>Re: [Users] deduplication<br><br>On Tue, 28 May 2013 13:00:36 +0200<br>Jiri Belka <jbelka@redhat.com> wrote:<br><br>> On Sat, 25 May 2013 15:02:40 +0100 (WEST)<br>> suporte@logicworks.pt wrote:<br>> <br>> > is deduplication possible? <br><br>> If we would talk about OSS systems then Dragon Fly BSD's hammerfs or<br>> Open Indiana ZFS (FreeBSD has it too) support deduplication and such<br>> filesystems are exported as NFS (so can be used as data domain).<br><br>If you would not use Linux (as they broke having /usr as separate<br>filesystem) and you would design your unix-like VMs correctly, you can<br>share a disk containing "static" data like /usr, /usr/local between<br>VMs as a kind of "deduplication" without being "trapped" by buzzword<br>technologies.<br><br>j.<br>_______________________________________________<br>Users mailing list<br>Users@ovirt.org<br>http://lists.ovirt.org/mailman/listinfo/users<br></div><br></div></body></html>