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From: Sean M <smckeownNO@BACKSIESearthlink.net>
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Subject: Re: Oracle and network dasd
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Date: Fri, 26 Apr 2002 15:08:24 -0600
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Sybrand Bakker wrote:
> 
> EEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKK
> NFS. You aren't serious, aren't you? Or do you simply have no budget?
> Oracle advises *strongly* against using NFS. 

This is very misleading.  It maybe true of plain old NFS, but it is
certainly not true of nfs for NAS.  Oracle supports nfs wholeheartedly
with specific NAS implementations, like those offered by Network
Appliance and EMC.  If they're certified under the OSCP program, then
Oracle has given it's blessing.

> It will be dead slow
> (especially using NFS 2 which is the default on AIX) and unstable. If
> the remote system drops the connection, do you know what is going to
> happen? Probably crash the database.

Dead slow and unstable?  Hardly so, at least not in my direct experience
with the NetApp product.  Slower maybe than other (usually more
expensive) options, but certainly acceptable for many, many uses.  And
it is in no way unstable when properly administered.  We run many
(dozens?) of databases on NetApps and have had excellent results.  You
may want to see the current thread on SAN's in the
comp.databases.oracle.server group, which has drifted into a NAS
discussion.  NAS is not a high performance solution, but it offers many
advantages over direct attached or SAN storage, and is certainly worth
considering/testing.

Think of it this way: Oracle itself is a big customer/partner of
NetApp.  If Oracle runs many of its own databases on NAS, it probably
has some merit.

Regards,
Sean
