You technically can but the btrfs implementation is problematic. It has gotten better but I wouldn’t call it production ready.
It does support raid1, raid10 and raid1c2/3. The reason I like btrfs is that it is baked into the Linux kernel and file system utilities so managing it is easier.
You technically can but the btrfs implementation is problematic. It has gotten better but I wouldn’t call it production ready.
It does support raid1, raid10 and raid1c2/3. The reason I like btrfs is that it is baked into the Linux kernel and file system utilities so managing it is easier.
Problem is, i seek good alternative for zfs for raid 5/6 filesystems on linux, so far i didn’t found any FS better than zfs for that purpose
For better or for worse ZFS does what it does really well. Right now we don’t have much in the way options.