From 5d834d401fde2d0b5ed7401a15e56908a44e791a Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: LoneTech <> Date: Tue, 13 Sep 2011 21:44:21 +0000 Subject: [PATCH] The strange use case of a non-networked Tahoe LAFS. [Imported from Trac: page UseCases, version 18] --- UseCases.md | 2 ++ 1 file changed, 2 insertions(+) diff --git a/UseCases.md b/UseCases.md index c8b7a88..af7bb28 100644 --- a/UseCases.md +++ b/UseCases.md @@ -7,12 +7,14 @@ As these network configurations develop, the *node roles* section develops in co | | | | | | | |---|---|---|---|---|---| |*name*|*typical number of nodes*|*administrative domains*|*node capacity*|*node availability*|*churn*| +|*non-RAID*|1 host, multiple nodes|one|potentially mixed|uniform|low| |*friendnet*|2-10|many domains, but all trusted|mixed|mixed|low| |*proprietary grid*|3-1000 servers, up to 50,000 clients|one domain for servers, many for clients|uniform|high|low| |*hivecache*|10-1000|one domain, but not as well controlled|somewhat uniform|high|low| |*Allmydata plus customers*|10-10,000|many|mixed|mixed|medium| |*global grid*|any|many|mixed|mixed|high| + * *non-RAID*: Turn the traditional redundancy stack on its head, applying filesystem-redundancy-crypto-filesystem by running a storage node on each disk. Has the advantages over RAID that storage is encrypted, any mix of capacities is fine, redundancy is freely selectable per file, and recovery does not require entire disks. * *friendnet*: You and your friends share a virtual filesystem. It remains accessible even when some of your friends' computers are unreachable. Your friends can't see your files by default, but you can share individual files and directories with individual friends or with all friends. * *proprietary grid -- 1x upload*: Pay $5/month and you can store your stuff on their grid. Or: run your own grid by buying a few servers, so that you can backup your own stuff on it. The data is uploaded to the servers over a streaming protocol such as HTTP (using the Web API). * *hivecache*: Install a tahoe node on each of the workstations in your office, turning their unused disk space into a giant storage pool.