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Enterprise Storage OS

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Enterprise Storage OS (ESOS)
OS familyLinux (Unix-like)
Initial releaseJanuary 2012; 12 years ago (2012-01)
Latest release4.1.8 / 13 May 2023; 19 months ago (2023-05-13)[1]
LicenseApache License, Version 2.0
Official websitewww.esos-project.com

Enterprise Storage OS, also known as ESOS, is a Linux distribution that serves as a block-level storage server in a storage area network (SAN).[2] ESOS is composed of open-source software projects that are required for a Linux distribution and several proprietary build and install time options.[3] The SCST project is the core component of ESOS; it provides the back-end storage functionality.[4]

Platform

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ESOS is a niche Linux distribution. ESOS is intended to run on a USB flash drive, or some other type of removable media such as Secure Digital, CompactFlash, etc. ESOS is a memory resident operating system: At boot, a tmpfs file system is initialized as the root file system and the USB flash drive image is copied onto this file system.[5] Configuration files and logs are periodically written to a USB flash drive (persistent storage) or by user intervention when configuration changes occur.[6]

Interface

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Screenshot of the main TUI screen in ESOS (Enterprise Storage OS).

ESOS utilizes a text-based user interface (TUI) for system management, network configuration, and storage provisioning functions.[7] The TUI used in ESOS is written in C; the ncurses and CDK libraries are used.

Front-end connectivity

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ESOS supports connectivity on several different front-end storage area network technologies.[8] These core functions are supported by SCST and third-party target drivers that vendors have developed for SCST:[9]

Back-end storage

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Open-source software projects and commodity computing server hardware are used on the back-end side to provide the underlying storage utilized by the front-end target interfaces:

  • Btrfs, XFS, and ext4 are all supported file systems for virtual disk files used with the "vdisk_fileio" device handler.
  • Popular, modern hardware RAID controllers from LSI, Adaptec, HP, and Areca are also supported in ESOS, including install-time CLI tool integration for these adapters.
  • Clustering and high-availability support is made possible by the Pacemaker and Corosync cluster software stack.
  • DRBD is fully supported to facilitate replication between ESOS storage servers, and/or to create redundant ESOS storage server clusters.
  • Virtual Tape Library (VTL) support by the mhVTL project.
  • Three SSD caching solutions: EnhanceIO, bcache, and dm-cache (lvmcache).
  • Other block storage functions include the automated tiered storage via the BTIER project and Ceph RBD mapping.

Installation

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ESOS differs from popular Linux distributions in that there is no bootable ISO image provided. ESOS consists of one archive file that is extracted on a local computer running a supported operating system (Linux, Windows, or Mac OS X).[12] The local computer is only used for installing the ESOS image to a USB flash drive (or other removable media device).[13] Users of ESOS extract the archive and execute the ESOS install script. The ESOS installer script prompts the user for the installation target device, writes the image, and allow users to integrate proprietary CLI RAID controller utilities into the ESOS USB flash drive.

License Change

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On January 16, 2019 (commit bfb8c55) the license of the ESOS project was changed from GNU General Public License (GPL) to Apache License, Version 2.0.

References

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  1. ^ "ESOS branches from GitHub".
  2. ^ DataON Storage (5 February 2015). "Mott College Slashed Storage Costs with DataON Storage". Archived from the original on 18 February 2015. Retrieved 7 February 2015.
  3. ^ Marc Smith (24 May 2012). "Implementing Enterprise Disk Arrays Using Open Source Software" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2014-08-01.
  4. ^ Marc Smith (16 April 2013). "Building & Using a Highly Available ESOS Disk Array".
  5. ^ Marc Smith (3 June 2014). "Virtual Desktops - From Pilot to Reality and the Trip We Made".[permanent dead link]
  6. ^ Marc Smith (15 May 2013). "Building and Using Open Source Storage Solutions" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2014-07-31.
  7. ^ Marc Smith (11 August 2012). "ESOS Update (8/11/2012)".
  8. ^ ”HA Guru” (12 February 2013). "Linux as an Open Storage Server".
  9. ^ Marc Smith (24 July 2014). "ESOS Project Update (July 2014)".
  10. ^ Avago Technologies (15 December 2014). "Mott Community College Increases Storage Performance with High-Availability Solution" (PDF).
  11. ^ ”Monster Network!” (16 March 2014). "Phase 10 is complete".
  12. ^ a b Marc Smith (14 July 2014). "Open Storage: Dual-Controller OSS Disk Array".
  13. ^ Marc Smith (10 March 2013). "ESOS Project Status & Updates (March 2013)".
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