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Japanese Firm Sells Tiny Linux Server in the States
Published: April 2, 2008
by Timothy Prickett Morgan
An intrepid and innovative Linux distributor and system manufacturer based in Japan called Plat'Home that opened up offices in San Jose, California, last year wants to bring its tiny Linux servers to the United States. This week, Plat'Home announced the availability of its palm-sized OpenBlockS Linux-based server in the U.S, and it is hoping to see some uptake in this new market for this and related baby Linux boxes.
Plat'Home, which was founded in Tokyo in 1993 as a commercial Linux distributor with a product called SSD/Linux, launched its first servers in 1996 and went public on the Tokyo Stock Exchange in 2000. The company had around $3 million in sales in fiscal 2007 (ended in March 2007) at current exchange rates, which is a lot for a company selling palm-sized computing devices that are entirely network-based. (Meaning, they do not have keyboard, mouse, or video plug ins.)
The first product that Plat'Home is bringing to the States is called the OpenBlockS server, which is based on IBM's 266 MHz PowerPC 405GPr processor. The unit, which is 4.5 by 3.2 by 1.5 inches, has 128 MB of main memory, two 100 Mbit Ethernet ports, a serial port, and an internal Compact Flash slot that can have a 16 MB flash drive. There is also space for an internal 2.5-inch IDE disk drive if the flash is not big enough. The machine can also be equipped with the PowerPC variants of NetBSD 4.0 Unix and Debian Linux 4.0. No matter what operating system customers pick, Plat'Home configures the machine with an FTP client and server, a Web server, DHCP and DNS servers, a Telnet server, a firewall, and PPP client software for linking Web browsers to the Internet--all for somewhere around 4.5 watts of power consumption.
The company's higher-end product, which is not going to be available in the United States until a month or so from now, is called OpenMicroServer, and this is a more powerful device that has Power over Ethernet (PoE) capabilities, which means it does not even need its own power supply to operate. This unit is a bit larger, at 9 by 4 by 1.3 inches, but it packs more features. First, it is based on a 400 MHz Alchemy RISC processor originally from Advanced Micro Devices but now controlled by Raza Electronics. The unit has the same 128 MB of main memory and 16 MB flash option, but it also sports two Gigabit Ethernet ports as well as the 100 Mbit Ethernet port it can use as a power source. Depending on what components are being stressed and what options are installed in the box, the OpenMicroServer burns between 7.6 watts and 9.1 watts. The unit does not have room for an internal hard drive, but it can have external USB drives. This device also comes with a special rack-mounting kit that allows up to four units to be put in a standard 1U rack space. The same operating systems are supported on the larger machine.
One use for the devices is to add some virtual private networking applications to it and then use them to remotely link people and other devices (like the proverbial vending machine) to a network in a secure manner. (The company sells a VPN program call PacketiX VPN 2,0 for just this purpose, in fact.) There are also bundles for Apache, MySQL, and PHP for Web applications, load balancing, wireless access point serving, Webcam surveillance, spam filtering, and other applications. There is even a stack for the devices preconfigured to support blogs. These applications are just open source software, of course. But the idea is that they run on a very tiny device and have tech support from a vendor behind them.
The OpenBlockS server is available now and costs around $440; OpenMicroServer is expected to sell for around $540 when it is available.
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Why File-based System Backup is your Best Bet
File-based, Full System Backups Create Advantages Over Image-based Backups
File-based backups used for system recovery have been around for years. And, until recently, file-based meant a long, painstaking, manual process capable of turning off even the most meticulous system administrator. Image-based backups, then, seemed to solve this problem by eliminating the need to deal with recreating partitions, filesystems, volume groups or other details related to the system's storage configuration. In an image-based restore, the storage configuration and data from the original system are restored as a whole to the new system. While this method produced fast recovery times, Linux administrators began to realize disk image backup was more of an alternative method with its own set of problems and limitations than an answer to the challenges of manual, file-based backup.
Limitations to Disk Image Backup
Since disk image backups make no distinction between files and instead backup the hard drive as a group of sectors, bare-metal recovery can be quick and easy by simply rewriting a duplicate image onto a new, identical disk drive. A fine solution, as long as the old system and new system are indeed identical in types, sizes, locations- basically the exact same hardware. Any differences in hardware, however, could render an image backup unusable.
Many system administrators know first-hand the frustration caused by the inflexibility of image-based backup. "What I hear time and time again from clients is that they switched from image-based backup to file-based because of the limitations they encountered when trying to restore a backup onto different hardware." said Manuel Altamirano, Storix Software Director of Sales and Marketing. "Administrators assume they will have access to identical hardware after a disaster or for migration when the time comes. Unfortunately, so often this is not the case. Companies are left with unplanned, excessive downtime."
Even more advanced disk image backup products, that offer alterations to disk partition tables, still fail to understand more advanced and increasingly common storage configuration tools such as the Logical Volume Manager (LVM) or Software RAID (meta-disks) that also must be altered to match new hard disk configuration before data can be restored. In these cases, users must manually alter and build the configuration, usually through command-line utilities and manual editing of configuration files. This also requires users to have knowledge on how to make a system bootable. Rebuilding a system using a disk image backup requires experienced Linux administrators and could take days, weeks or longer resulting in crippling downtime for an organization.
Advances in File-based Backup
File-based backup tools today can automate the process of recording every aspect of a system separately such as disk, filesystem and boot loader configuration while supporting all popular Linux storage configuration tools (i.e. LVM and Software RAID). This detailed backup information is used to greatly simplify the recovery of a failed system from scratch, even if hardware differences are detected on the new system. Furthermore, systems rebuilt from the ground up using file-based backups often times operate better than the original because there is virtually no fragmentation when the restore is completed.
Flexible recovery based on file-based backup
File-based backup products have the ability to reconfigure disks, partitions, filesystems and other storage solutions to fit onto new hardware. This ability to adapt a backup to fit new hardware or alter the system's storage configuration is called "Adaptable System Recovery" or ASR. Only backup solutions that gather details about the original system have enough information and flexibility to make the ASR process of altering configuration so simple even novice Linux administrators can quickly perform the recovery. Once new configuration is completed, data files from the backup are easily restored onto the new hardware. Finally, the system is made bootable based on the new hardware.
The revolutionary adaptability of ASR found in file-based backup tools creates further added value for system administrators because these products can now be used for far more than just reactive tasks such as disaster recovery.
Applications for ASR:
Reactive
- Disaster Recovery- restore systems in minutes after a crash, even if hardware is not the same as the original
Proactive
- Provisioning/cloning- a single backup "golden image" can be used to provision different systems, even if disks, adapters or other elements are not the same.
- Storage software migration- change configuration on the same system for improved performance and availability
- Hardware migration- install the same system onto newer or virtual systems
New system backup management features
Products using file-based system backup have not neglected to consider a system administrator's daily backup responsibilities. These products now incorporate functionality for backup management as well as some of the most advanced features seen in backup and recovery solutions for Linux and AIX. Some advanced features designed to simplify daily backup management for system administrators include:
- Graphical, Web and Command line interfaces
- Local and remote backups to disk or tape devices
- Sequential and random tape autoloader support
- Support for SAN storage solutions
- Tivoli Storage Manager integration
- Oracle database backup support
- Backup data encryption
- Multiple compression levels
File-based Backup Solutions Provide Most Bang for the Buck
Inexpensive products exist that combine both file-based backup management and ASR in one program. Look for a file-based system backup product with advanced features like those mentioned above. In turn, regular backup responsibilities such as automatically verifying backups and encrypting backup data will become much easier. Additionally, combined ASR capabilities greatly reduce downtime and required expertise for both reactive (even bare metal) and proactive recovery projects. File-based system backup and recovery solutions are an economical and more comprehensive option than their image-based counterparts.
About the Author
Anne Stobaugh is an independent contractor working with Storix Software to educate Linux and AIX users on the advantages of file-based backup and recovery solutions.
www.storix.com
www.stobaughmarketing.com
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Editor: Timothy Prickett Morgan
Contributing Editors: Dan Burger, Joe Hertvik, Kevin Vandever,
Shannon O'Donnell, Victor Rozek, Hesh Wiener, Alex Woodie
Publisher and Advertising Director: Jenny Thomas
Advertising Sales Representative: Kim Reed
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March 22, 2008: Volume 10, Number 12
March 15, 2008: Volume 10, Number 11
March 8, 2008: Volume 10, Number 10
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