Why ZFS is the ultimate filesystem for your NAS
When setting up your network-attached storage (NAS) device, you have a few options for the filesystem. You could choose to run absolutely anything you desire, but I'm here to tell you that the correct choice is actually the Zeta File System (ZFS). You'll often come across Btrfs, NTFS, and Ext4 on your travels, but ZFS is the way to go if you wish to maximize availability, reliability, and data storage redundancy. I'll cover data integrity checks, ZFS's Copy-on-Write (COW) design, compression, scalability, and advanced caching.Once at the end, you'll agree that ZFS is the best filesystem for your NAS.
When setting up your network-attached storage (NAS) device, you have a few options for the filesystem. You could choose to run absolutely anything you desire, but I’m here to tell you that the correct choice is actually the Zeta File System (ZFS). You’ll often come across Btrfs, NTFS, and Ext4 on your travels, but ZFS is the way to go if you wish to maximize availability, reliability, and data storage redundancy. I’ll cover data integrity checks, ZFS’s Copy-on-Write (COW) design, compression, scalability, and advanced caching.Once at the end, you’ll agree that ZFS is the best filesystem for your NAS.
احسان کوتی
Iran
Iran
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