On-Prem

Storage

Debian-based TrueNAS Scale updated – and iXsystems wins a gong

Similar look for FOSS folk, with same UI and OpenZFS storage back-end


Enterprise NAS vendor iXsystems has updated its Kubernetes-capable Debian-based NAS OS, and scored Digital Public Good status too.

iXsystems now has a family of dedicated storage-server OSes, and the new release of TrueNAS Scale, version 22.12.1. The company has a very cautious, slow-moving lifecycle – which is what you want from a vendor whose offerings will hold all your corporate data.

At the end of last year, it released Scale 22.12, codenamed "Bluefin", as we predicted when we covered TrueNAS Core version 13 last May. The company's Morgan Littlewood told us: "'Bluefin' was the first full release, and this is the 'point-one' version of that."

At the time of writing, the company's Software Status page hasn't yet been updated with the new version, but there you can read its description of the suitability of each version. Its point-one releases mark the point where it considers the software ready for production use for "general", "conservative" and "mission-critical" customers.

TrueNAS Scale is the newest edition of TrueNAS, and slightly surprisingly for the biggest commercial vendor of FreeBSD products, Scale is based on Linux: specifically, on Debian. The reason is basically Kubernetes. Otherwise, Scale looks and works very much like its elder siblings: it has the same UI, and runs on the same OpenZFS storage back-end as the FreeBSD-based TrueNAS Core, which is the free edition of the OS that the company sells on its Enterprise products. You can even do an in-place upgrade from the FreeBSD-based TrueNAS Core to TrueNAS Scale, and it will retain your config – it will even migrate Core's bhyve-based VMs to Scale's KVM VMs.

Reg sister site Blocks & Files has looked at TrueNAS Scale's clustering support, as well as its cloudy Global Distributed Storage partnership with StorJ.

The company is also proud that TrueNAS has won certification as a Digital Public Good. The DPG standard is a worldwide cooperative effort to ensure that FOSS products meet the United Nations' guidelines for digital cooperation.

It also has a new model in what, for iXsystems, is its low-end line, TrueNAS Mini. The TrueNAS Mini-R is a 12-drive rackmount model and starts at $1,998, so it's not going to cause consumer NAS shifters such as Synology to sweat. Its offering for home users is the free TrueNAS Core, which you can run on any PC-compatible kit: The Reg FOSS desk has a couple of instances, one on an old HP Microserver N54L and another on a slightly newer Microserver G8. It works fine in 8GB of RAM, and happily talks SMB, NFS and AppleTalk, including acting as a networked Time Machine for a couple of old Intel Macs. ®

Send us news
10 Comments

CERN swells storage space beyond 1EB for LHC's latest ion-whacking experiments

A petabyte or more a day of readings? No problem, pal

Microsoft introduces AI meddling to your files with Copilot in OneDrive

We hope cloud storage service is ready for this web wingman

Do SSD failures follow the bathtub curve? Ask Backblaze

Check out the raw data yourself... if you dare

CERN swaps out databases to feed its petabyte-a-day habit

Run 3 reboot provoked challenges for Europe's particle-smashing project

Toyota servers ran out of storage, crashed production at 14 plants in Japan

Oh, what a foul-up as database maintenance created a mess

I'll see your data loss and raise you a security policy violation

Engineer trumped angry user by pointing to the rulebook

Dropbox limits ‘all the storage you need’ unlimited plan, blames abusive users

One percent of customers store more than 35TB. And before you ask: Yes, you can blame crypto creeps for this

Misfiring Lenovo hires Ford director to help with revamp

Hold onto your hats people, Lenovo to invest $1B in AI as hardware sales falter

Western Digital sued over claims of data-trashing SanDisk, My Passport SSDs

Drives are anything but solid, allegedly

MySQL Heatwave dives into object storage data lakes

Oracle joins the analytics anywhere bandwagon, promises future access to AWS S3

Memory chipmaker Micron's sales down 57% as market bottoms out

Company eyes return to memory growth, but warns life on the China ban-list could be hard

Chinese malware intended to infect USB drives accidentally infects networked storage too

Hides itself from popular Asian AV, also uses games to do its dirty work