Changes between Version 95 and Version 96 of FAQ
- Timestamp:
- 2013-07-27T02:10:23Z (11 years ago)
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FAQ
v95 v96 1 1 '''[=#Q0_what_is_it Q0:] What is Tahoe-LAFS? What can you do with it?''' 2 2 3 A: Think of Tahoe-LAFS as being like [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/BitTorrent BitTorrent], except you can upload as well as download. Also, Tahoe-LAFS has directories and files so that if you're looking at a directory that is stored in Tahoe-LAFS, you can navigate to a file or sub-directory that is also in Tahoe-LAFS. So in that sense it is a little more like a filesystem than !BitTorrent is. Tahoe-LAFS comes with filesystem integration for Unix (FUSE) and for Windows—see [#Q23_FUSE Q23], below.3 A: Think of Tahoe-LAFS as being like [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/BitTorrent BitTorrent], except you can upload as well as download. Also, Tahoe-LAFS has directories and files so that if you're looking at a directory that is stored in Tahoe-LAFS, you can navigate to a file or sub-directory that is also in Tahoe-LAFS. So in that sense it is a little more like a filesystem than !BitTorrent is. Tahoe-LAFS also allows filesystem integration for Unix via sshfs. 4 4 5 5 '''[=#Q1_why_tahoe_lafs Q1:] What is special about Tahoe-LAFS? Why should anyone care about it instead of [wiki:RelatedProjects#OtherProjects other distributed storage systems]?''' … … 19 19 This uses an amount of space on each server equal to the total size of your data divided by {{{K}}}. 20 20 21 The default Tahoe-LAFS parameters are {{{3-of-10}}}, so the data is spread over 10 different drives, and you can lose any 7 of them and still recover the entire data. This gives much better reliability than comparable RAID setups, at a cost of only 3.3 times the storage space that a single copy takes. It takes about 3.3 times the storage space, because it uses space on each server needs equal to 1/3 of the size of the dataand there are 10 servers.22 23 Erasure coding is also known as "forward error correction" and as an "information dispersal algorithm".21 The default Tahoe-LAFS parameters are {{{3-of-10}}}, so the data is spread over 10 different drives, and you can lose any 7 of them and still recover the entire data. This gives much better reliability than comparable RAID setups, at a cost of only 3.3 times the storage space that a single copy takes. It takes about 3.3 times the storage space, because it uses space on each server equal to 1/3 of the size of the data, and there are 10 servers. 22 23 Erasure coding is also known as "forward error correction". 24 24 25 25 '''[=#Q3_disable_encryption Q3:] Is there a way to disable the encryption for content which isn't secret? Won't that save a lot of CPU cycles?'''