On Jan 14, 2020, at 7:03 PM, Gary Meyer
<gary(a)sluug.org> wrote:
This Thurs nite at Nick & Elaina’s for the monthly StL LUG...
The awaited presentation by SuSE. This topic had planned by SuSE to present
this to us while they were here for their nation wide, travelling show last September.
That show was cancelled, and we’ve been trying to schedule it since. So, we are elated
that Michael will be coming in from Kansas City just to do this. We hope to have a great
turnout of our members and other interested parties, so please invite everyone you know
who is interested in Linux distress, file systems, or SuSE! So, make sure you all come
Thurs nite! (Yes, we used to have the separate SuSE LUG at lunch time but we will do
this as the regular nite-time mtng.)
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StL Linux Users Group ~CephFS file sys. SuSE Linux
Thursday, January 16⋅6:30 – 9:00pm
Monthly on the third Thursday
Nick and Elena's Pizzeria, 3007 Woodson Rd, Overland MO 63114
Description:https://stllug.sluug.org/
Thurs 16 Jan '20
Why EVERY Sysadmin should consider the CephFS file system.
Michael Carrington (SuSE Linux Corp.wants us to know WHY EVERY SysAdmin should consider
using CephFS, wether for considered for that big-honking Storage Array Cluster on the
corporate enterprise or THE SMALL scale user, i.e. small office,... or even home/single
user. What features YOU may want to be aware and perhaps use CEPH. Come hear why!
Since we haven’t had a speaker from SuSE in awhile, this will be part of a broader
discussion, i.e.
1. SUSE - What has happened recently.
2. SUSE Enterprise Linux - you know our kernel
3. SUSE Enterprise Storage -
• 50,000' view
• architecture
• uses
• Why you, as a UNIX admin should care
4. Other stuff
===========================
The CephFS specifics:
Ceph File System is an "object storage based”, free software, storage platform that
stores data on a single distributed computer cluster. It provides interfaces for
object-, block- and file-level storage. Ceph aims primarily to be: completely
distributed without a single point of failure, scalable to the exabyte level, and freely
available.
Ceph replicates data and makes it fault-tolerant,[4] using commodity hardware and
requiring no specific hardware support. As a result of its design, the system is both
self-healing and self-managing, aiming to minimize administration time and other costs.
Ceph started in 2012. Was considered production ready in 2017. It was most recently
updated in March 2019 w nearly annual releases.
Developers include: Canonical, CERN, Cisco, Fujitsu, Intel, Red Hat, SanDisk, & SUSE.
We in SLUUG had talks on it in Apr 2016 & Aug 2017.
by Michael Carrington, SUSE Linux Corp. Storage System engineer from Kansas City)
VENUE Nick and Elena's Pizzeria
3007 Woodson Rd, Overland, MO 63114
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The STLLUG meetings are usually on the third Thursday of each month from 6:30PM to
9:00PM.