There's no reason you couldn't; btrfs is pretty stable.
Edit: Going on five years of using btrfs on production servers (storing and processing data on a 24x7 basis).
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There's no reason you couldn't; btrfs is pretty stable.
Edit: Going on five years of using btrfs on production servers (storing and processing data on a 24x7 basis).
Btrfs is good for small systems with 1-2 disks. ZFS is good for many disks and benefits heavily from ram. ZFS also has specially disks.
BTRFS is running just fine for my 8 disk home server.
That is not a recommended setup. Raid5 is not stable yet.
I never said anything about RAID5. I'm running RAID1.
For 8 disks?
Yep
Interesting
Oh, I misremembered... It's only 7 disks in BTRFS RAID1.
I have:
For a combined total of 40 TB raw storage, which in RAID1 turns into 20 TB usable.
I've been running ZFS in the form of FreeNAS/TrueNAS in production environments for the past 12 years or so. Started with around 5TB and currently have nearly 300TB across several servers. Mostly NFS nowadays, but have shared out SMB and iSCSI.
No data loss. Drives have been easy to replace and re-silver. We have had a couple instances where a failing ZIL or L2ARC has crashed a storage server and taken storage offline, but removing/replacing the log device got us up and running without data loss.
Btrfs I only have experience on home systems. It has reliably stored my data for several years now, but I'm about to put it to the test this weekend. I plan on adding 4x8TB disks to a 4TB mirror to turn it into a 20TB RAID10. Wish me luck!