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by ahl
411 days ago
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ZFS was developed in Solaris, and at the time we were mostly selling SPARC systems. That changed rapidly and the biggest commercial push was in the form of the ZFS Storage Appliance that our team (known as Fishworks) built at Sun. Those systems were based on AMD servers that Sun was making at the time such as Thumper [1]. Also in 2016, Ubuntu leaned in to use of ZFS for containers [2]. There was nothing that specific about Solaris that made sense for ZFS, and even less of a connection to the SPARC architecture. [1]: https://www.theregister.com/2005/11/16/sun_thumper/ [2]: https://ubuntu.com/blog/zfs-is-the-fs-for-containers-in-ubun... |
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Although it does not change the answer to the original question, I have long been under the impression that part of the design of ZFS had been influenced by the Niagara processor. The heavily threaded ZIO pipeline had been so forward thinking that it is difficult to imagine anyone devising it unless they were thinking of the future that the Niagara processor represented.
Am I correct to think that or did knowledge of the upcoming Niagara processor not shape design decisions at all?
By the way, why did Thumper use an AMD Opteron over the UltraSPARC T1 (Niagara)? That decision seems contrary to idea of putting all of the wood behind one arrow.