Solaris FAIL
I’ve installed Ubuntu Server on to the backup server at work. There’s a bit of a back story to this one.
A while back we got hold of a QNAP box in work for throwing backups on to. It wasn’t without it’s faults, but it did the job - it exported NFS shares and had space left over for the occasional request of temporary disk space. It had 4 x 500GB disks, which at the time was pretty big. The disks were running in a RAID-5 configuration, so I was quite happy in my naiveté that when the eventual disk failure occurred we’d be able to handle it. The disk failures will no doubt still arrive, but they’ve been pre-empted by a failure of the processor fan. A fan I couldn’t find a replacement for.
Rather than buy a new NAS box, I had the great idea to buying a standard server we could replace all the parts of. We ordered an HP ProLiant DL 160 G5, a box that I noticed later on was on the Solaris HCL. Fantastic - I could put Solaris on there and and get all that ZFS-sy goodness you want in a storage box. In theory, anyway…
Solaris wouldn’t install. I tried Solaris 10U5, Solaris 10U6, OpenSolaris 2008.5, a few betas and eventually 2008.11. I even tried the (unsupported) Solaris Express, which wouldn’t even boot from CD. I asked dumb questions on #opensolaris (and to be fair, received some good suggestions). I Googled and found out about installation turds and devid patches. None of it worked - the furthest I ever got was the server hanging at the hostname report (although I got very used a small red line at the bottom left of the screen that I still don’t know the significance of).
Eventually I gave up. Stuck an 8GB USB drive into the box and installed Ubuntu Server 8.10. I don’t have ZFS, but I do have a RAID-10 volume that I’m happy with (even if Steve Cassidy isn’t - he railed against this sort of config in the February PC Pro). With any luck, BTRFS will be along soon (although I’d still love to see ZFS on Linux and have a file system common to Linux, FreeBSD, OS X and Solaris).



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