My company is a team of developers and system integrators and we build cloud services for companies so they can pull stuff back from Google and Microsoft in-house to make it more efficient and use the cloud for overage services. In order to do that, we need compatible services that can run in-house, Azure, Google Cloud, or anywhere else. One of the services we are presently using is ZFS with an S3 layer on top. It matches with what most people use for storage coming out of Azure. We are currently using Linux ZFS, which is the open-source version.
Director at a tech services company with 1-10 employees
Real User
2022-02-06T07:18:23Z
Feb 6, 2022
I use Oracle ZFS on my servers and all my VMs run on Oracle ZFS redundant arrays. My NAS which is a separate unit is running TrueNAS and I'm running five drives in an Oracle ZFS array. We have a lot of redundancy there, which has saved us from having a critical data disaster at least three times already in the last five years.
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My company is a team of developers and system integrators and we build cloud services for companies so they can pull stuff back from Google and Microsoft in-house to make it more efficient and use the cloud for overage services. In order to do that, we need compatible services that can run in-house, Azure, Google Cloud, or anywhere else. One of the services we are presently using is ZFS with an S3 layer on top. It matches with what most people use for storage coming out of Azure. We are currently using Linux ZFS, which is the open-source version.
I use Oracle ZFS on my servers and all my VMs run on Oracle ZFS redundant arrays. My NAS which is a separate unit is running TrueNAS and I'm running five drives in an Oracle ZFS array. We have a lot of redundancy there, which has saved us from having a critical data disaster at least three times already in the last five years.