seaweedfs
GlusterFS
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seaweedfs | GlusterFS | |
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34 | 19 | |
21,013 | 4,489 | |
2.3% | 1.8% | |
9.9 | 6.4 | |
6 days ago | 7 days ago | |
Go | C | |
Apache License 2.0 | GNU General Public License v3.0 only |
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seaweedfs
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DwarFS – The Deduplicating Warp-Speed Advanced Read-Only File System
Whoops: WebDAV:
https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=39417503
SeaweedFS supports WebDAV. https://github.com/seaweedfs/seaweedfs/wiki/WebDAV
I'm not able to find if both/restic supports mounting backups as WebDAV, but in theory there's nothing stopping you.
It's 100% user space (expose a rest service) and supported by a bunch of file-browsers with a bit of a network aware component to it as well.
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Billion File Filesystem
If you want/need to take out the metadata, there's some nice solutions for that https://github.com/seaweedfs/seaweedfs
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SeaweedFS fast distributed storage system for blobs, objects, files and datalake
I posted this on https://github.com/seaweedfs/seaweedfs/discussions/5290
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DuckDB + dbt for a serverless event correlation pipeline?
I like the idea of using SeaweedFS as an intermediate layer with object write notifications going to SQS, RabbitMQ, or a local file, which could also allow me to observe the changes to different files through a metric collection layer like Prometheus and Grafana.
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Show HN: OpenSign – The open source alternative to DocuSign
> Theoretically they could swap with minio but last time we used it it was not a drop-in replacement yet.
Depends on whether AGPL v3 works for you or not (or whether you decide to pay them), I guess: https://min.io/pricing
I've actually been looking for more open alternatives, but haven't found much.
Zenko CloudServer seemed to be somewhat promising, but doesn't seem to be managed very actively: https://github.com/scality/cloudserver/issues/4986 (their Docker images on DockerHub were last updated 10 months ago, which is what the homepage links to; blog doesn't seem active since 2019, forums don't have much going on, despite some action on GitHub still)
There was also Garage, but that one is also AGPL v3: https://garagehq.deuxfleurs.fr/
The closest I got was discovering that SeaweedFS has an S3 compatible mode: https://github.com/seaweedfs/seaweedfs
- The Tailscale Universal Docker Mod
- SeaweedFS
- Google Cloud Storage FUSE
- Experience running rook-ceph in production/large clusters
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First Homelab as a 19yr old Software Developer
SeaweedFS S3 Gateway for Joplin notes
GlusterFS
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Tell HN: ZFS silent data corruption bugfix – my research results
https://github.com/gluster/glusterfs/issues/894
And apparently apart from modern coreutils using that, it is mostly gentoo users hitting the bugs in lseek.
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Linux deserves a better class of friends
This Product Appendix does not apply to online service offerings managed by Red Hat or generally available open source projects such as www.wildfly.org, www.fedoraproject.org, www.openstack.redhat.com, www.gluster.org, www.centos.org, okd.io, Ansible Project Software or other community projects.
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Which distributed filesystem to use on a 4 node cluster?
Just because Red Hat will stop selling commercial support for their product, does not mean GlusterFS itself is dying. It's an open source project like any other - https://github.com/gluster/glusterfs
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Setting up a 2 node distributed network share
https://www.gluster.org/ Is the way to do this across nodes
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System Design: Netflix
This allows us to fetch the desired quality of the video as per the user's request, and once the media file finishes processing, it will be uploaded to a distributed file storage such as HDFS, GlusterFS, or an object storage such as Amazon S3 for later retrieval during streaming.
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What's the best way to periodically sync two remote servers?
GlusterFS
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System Design: The complete course
But where can we store files at scale? Well, object storage is what we're looking for. Object stores break data files up into pieces called objects. It then stores those objects in a single repository, which can be spread out across multiple networked systems. We can also use distributed file storage such as HDFS or GlusterFS.
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First Apartment and First Homelab
GlusterFS - same as above (https://www.gluster.org/)
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Multiple DS units acting as one?
What you look for is a clustered file system. Like https://www.gluster.org/. As long as all units are closeby with low latency there are a couple solutions that allow you to create distributed storage solutions of various kinds. Key value stores applenty, clustered file systems that pretent to be one file system etc. If you have geographically distributed solutions with high latencies it becomes harder. Most open source systems don't work really well in this scenario. There were a couple attempts like Hydrabase but they didn't go so far. It normally is solved by doing two clusters and then replicate between them.
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Upload pdf file to mongodb atlas
I'd imagine most managed service providers are going to require a credit card, though most of them have a free tier. If you want to take an unmanaged approach, maybe look into Gluster. I've used it before and never had issue with it, but I also had an infrastructure team that set it up, so I'm not familiar with the challenges that way: https://www.gluster.org/
What are some alternatives?
minio - The Object Store for AI Data Infrastructure
Ceph - Ceph is a distributed object, block, and file storage platform
lizardfs - LizardFS is an Open Source Distributed File System licensed under GPLv3.
garage - (Mirror) S3-compatible object store for small self-hosted geo-distributed deployments. Main repo: https://git.deuxfleurs.fr/Deuxfleurs/garage
Tahoe-LAFS - The Tahoe-LAFS decentralized secure filesystem.
cubefs - cloud-native file store
Go IPFS - IPFS implementation in Go [Moved to: https://github.com/ipfs/kubo]
GlusterFS - Web Content for gluster.org -- Deprecated as of September 2017
btrfs - Haskell bindings to the btrfs API
MooseFS - MooseFS – Open Source, Petabyte, Fault-Tolerant, Highly Performing, Scalable Network Distributed File System (Software-Defined Storage)