SirMaster
Patron
- Joined
- Mar 19, 2014
- Messages
- 241
BTRFS does have a lot of development happening. Every new kernel (every 2-3 months) they get a lot of work done on it.
We are also starting to see some companies including Facebook and Google using it on their production servers now. Heck even NETGEAR ReadyNAS systems can use BTRFS now instead of LVM+MDADM and they have a nice WebGUI to manage it.
Also BTRFS is being set as the default filesystem for openSUSE 12.3 and they are talking about the same for Fedora 21.
I've been using BTRFS as well as ZFS both for 2 years now and I really like them, but I just have a feeling BTRFS will take over my main storage array in about another year. It's been looking really good in the last 2 kernels and I love the features it has that ZFS does not have for my uses.
Sure ZFS has some features that BTRFS doesn't have right now, but those features are not as important to me personally. The functioning block pointer rewrite that BTRFS already has is a pretty compelling feature for home users I would say. It allows converting between RAID types (single -> mirror -> RAID5 -> RAID6 -> (BTRFS supports up to 6 parity disks)), adding single disks to a RAID(n) set, disk balancing, defragmentation, and even offline deduplication.
I think OpenMediaVault as well as the Consumer NAS market (Synology, QNAP, Thecus) will see a lot of attention in a little over a year when they all start adding BTRFS.
It's a great time to be a data hoarder heh. I love ZFS, but I am looking toward the future and keeping my eyes open toward BTRFS for sure.
We are also starting to see some companies including Facebook and Google using it on their production servers now. Heck even NETGEAR ReadyNAS systems can use BTRFS now instead of LVM+MDADM and they have a nice WebGUI to manage it.
Also BTRFS is being set as the default filesystem for openSUSE 12.3 and they are talking about the same for Fedora 21.
I've been using BTRFS as well as ZFS both for 2 years now and I really like them, but I just have a feeling BTRFS will take over my main storage array in about another year. It's been looking really good in the last 2 kernels and I love the features it has that ZFS does not have for my uses.
Sure ZFS has some features that BTRFS doesn't have right now, but those features are not as important to me personally. The functioning block pointer rewrite that BTRFS already has is a pretty compelling feature for home users I would say. It allows converting between RAID types (single -> mirror -> RAID5 -> RAID6 -> (BTRFS supports up to 6 parity disks)), adding single disks to a RAID(n) set, disk balancing, defragmentation, and even offline deduplication.
I think OpenMediaVault as well as the Consumer NAS market (Synology, QNAP, Thecus) will see a lot of attention in a little over a year when they all start adding BTRFS.
It's a great time to be a data hoarder heh. I love ZFS, but I am looking toward the future and keeping my eyes open toward BTRFS for sure.