I have no idea if it will or not. My experience with shared disk solutions is that very fwe packages or even operating systems work well with them when you put them under load. For anything critical, I would not use a shared disks solution. I'm sorry if you took it to mean that it would work. It may, but I have not tested it to see.
-_Gene [EMAIL PROTECTED] made the following keystrokes: > >So, the only problem is filesystem? If cyrus is trained to handle multiple >imap processes and more important multiple lmtpd..... > > >|---------+----------------------------> >| | Gene Rackow | >| | <[EMAIL PROTECTED]| >| | ov> | >| | | >| | 2002.03.19 20:59 | >| | | >|---------+----------------------------> > >-------------------------------------------------------------------------- > ------------------------------------| > | > | > | To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] > | > | cc: > | > | Subject: Re: multiple cyruses via SAN > | > >-------------------------------------------------------------------------- > ------------------------------------| > > > > >Actually, it MAY just work, but I kind of doubt it. Few things >are really designed to work with truely shared disk. > >Also from what I have seen of the cxfs stuff, you'll have a whole bigger >set of problems in keeping your system up and running. Don't go dow >that path without lots of testing. There would be nothing like >getting your whole user community moved over to it only to have something >in the filesystem go south causing you to need to restore the world >(again). > >--Gene > > >[EMAIL PROTECTED] made the following keystrokes: > > > >So you think if i simply had cxfs, it would work w/o problems? > > > > > >