brando56894
Wizard
- Joined
- Feb 15, 2014
- Messages
- 1,537
I know it's slated for FreeNAS 12 (IIRC) but any loose timeline? 6 months? 2 years? I know unexpected things happen (like in Corral hahaha) but since the move from Redmine to Jira, I don't see any proposed dates.
I've always been a huge fan of FreeNAS and ZFS, even though I'm a Linux guy at heart (currently a Linux SysAdmin for a huge multimedia streaming company in NYC). I've been switching back and forth ever since FreeNAS 9.3 (?) since I love the GUI and easy of use, but never really liked how FreeNAS/BSD limited me since I was trying to use it like a full OS and not a NAS appliance. Jails were nice but were out of date to me since I regularly use Arch Linux, trying to get updated versions from ports generally meant compiling hundreds of dependent packages, which wasn't fun on a 4 or 6 core processor clocked at like 2 GHz. VirtualBox straight up sucked, and I had frequent issues with Bhyve locking up under heavy load in the guest OS, something the devs could never replicate no matter how hard they tried, but I could replicate at the drop of a hat. Back to Linux it was!
I've done multi-guest virtualization (vSphere hypervisor, Linux VM for general purpose, FreeNAS with my HBA passed through for storage, and a Windows VM for gaming) but that just generally becomes a pain because FreeNAS has to be alive and well, before the other two can successfully work. I've tried other NAS OSes based on Linux, even ones that claim to support ZFS, which they do, but it's not integrated into their GUI/software, so it's no different than using my perferred distro.
I've just settled back on Ubuntu 19.04 with ZoL and run everything in Docker. I'm not a fan of RancherOS for home usage, it's far too complex. I'd happily setup a bhyve Linux VM in FreeNAS and run Docker from that, especially since I switched from a 6 core Xeon to a 24 core Threadripper 2 :D. I do want to see if the processor or chipset was the issue but the issue is that I upgraded my feature flags like a year ago, so my pools can no longer be imported, and I'm not about to destroy my 70 TiB zpool yet again to just migrate over to FreeNAS.
I've always been a huge fan of FreeNAS and ZFS, even though I'm a Linux guy at heart (currently a Linux SysAdmin for a huge multimedia streaming company in NYC). I've been switching back and forth ever since FreeNAS 9.3 (?) since I love the GUI and easy of use, but never really liked how FreeNAS/BSD limited me since I was trying to use it like a full OS and not a NAS appliance. Jails were nice but were out of date to me since I regularly use Arch Linux, trying to get updated versions from ports generally meant compiling hundreds of dependent packages, which wasn't fun on a 4 or 6 core processor clocked at like 2 GHz. VirtualBox straight up sucked, and I had frequent issues with Bhyve locking up under heavy load in the guest OS, something the devs could never replicate no matter how hard they tried, but I could replicate at the drop of a hat. Back to Linux it was!
I've done multi-guest virtualization (vSphere hypervisor, Linux VM for general purpose, FreeNAS with my HBA passed through for storage, and a Windows VM for gaming) but that just generally becomes a pain because FreeNAS has to be alive and well, before the other two can successfully work. I've tried other NAS OSes based on Linux, even ones that claim to support ZFS, which they do, but it's not integrated into their GUI/software, so it's no different than using my perferred distro.
I've just settled back on Ubuntu 19.04 with ZoL and run everything in Docker. I'm not a fan of RancherOS for home usage, it's far too complex. I'd happily setup a bhyve Linux VM in FreeNAS and run Docker from that, especially since I switched from a 6 core Xeon to a 24 core Threadripper 2 :D. I do want to see if the processor or chipset was the issue but the issue is that I upgraded my feature flags like a year ago, so my pools can no longer be imported, and I'm not about to destroy my 70 TiB zpool yet again to just migrate over to FreeNAS.
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