On Thu, 7 Feb 2008, Vladislav Bolkhovitin wrote:why should linux as an iSCSI target be limited to passthrough to a SCSI device. the most common use of this sort of thing that I would see is to load up a bunch of 1TB SATA drives in a commodity PC, run software RAID, and then export the resulting volume to other servers via iSCSI. not a 'real' SCSI device in sight. As far as how good a standard iSCSI is, at this point I don't think it really matters. There are too many devices and manufacturers out there that implement iSCSI as their storage protocol (from both sides, offering storage to other systems, and using external storage). Sometimes the best technology doesn't win, but Linux should be interoperable with as much as possible and be ready to support the winners and the loosers in technology options, for as long as anyone chooses to use the old equipment (after all, we support things like Arcnet networking, which lost to Ethernet many years ago) David Lang --
| Greg Kroah-Hartman | [PATCH 006/196] Chinese: add translation of oops-tracing.txt |
| Linus Torvalds | Linux 2.6.21-rc1 |
| david | Re: Dual-Licensing Linux Kernel with GPL V2 and GPL V3 |
| Vladislav Bolkhovitin | Re: Integration of SCST in the mainstream Linux kernel |
| Alexey Dobriyan | Re: [GIT]: Networking |
| Gerrit Renker | [PATCH 27/37] dccp: Integration of dynamic feature activation - part 2 (server side) |
| Jarek Poplawski | Re: [PATCH] pkt_sched: Destroy gen estimators under rtnl_lock(). |
| Evgeniy Polyakov | Re: [BUG] New Kernel Bugs |
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