> As for why I think Helios will become customer facing: Oxide is a small startup. They have limited resources.
Have you looked at the pedigree of many of the people behind the project? I don't say this because "these guys smart", but because these guys bent over backwards for their customers when they were Sun engineers. Bryan didn't write dtrace for nothing.
> Imagine you're observing a recurring but rare I/O slowdown that seems to trigger under some certain conditions, and tell me a competent sysadmin wouldn't want to log in on all the related boxes (client Helios, >=3 server Helioses for the block store) and look at the logs & stats.
I think you're simultaneously over-estimating and under-estimating the people who will deploy this. There's a lot of companies who would want a "cloud in a box" that would happily plug hardware in and submit a support ticket if they ever find an issue, because their system engineers either don't have the time, desire, or competence (unfortunately common) to do anything more. The ones who are happy to start debugging stuff on their own would have absolutely wonderful tooling at their fingertips (dtrace) and wouldn't have any issue figuring out how to adapt to something other than Linux (hell, I've been running TrueNAS for the better part of a decade and being on a *BSD has never bothered me).
Have you looked at the pedigree of many of the people behind the project? I don't say this because "these guys smart", but because these guys bent over backwards for their customers when they were Sun engineers. Bryan didn't write dtrace for nothing.
> Imagine you're observing a recurring but rare I/O slowdown that seems to trigger under some certain conditions, and tell me a competent sysadmin wouldn't want to log in on all the related boxes (client Helios, >=3 server Helioses for the block store) and look at the logs & stats.
I think you're simultaneously over-estimating and under-estimating the people who will deploy this. There's a lot of companies who would want a "cloud in a box" that would happily plug hardware in and submit a support ticket if they ever find an issue, because their system engineers either don't have the time, desire, or competence (unfortunately common) to do anything more. The ones who are happy to start debugging stuff on their own would have absolutely wonderful tooling at their fingertips (dtrace) and wouldn't have any issue figuring out how to adapt to something other than Linux (hell, I've been running TrueNAS for the better part of a decade and being on a *BSD has never bothered me).