SFS provides two types of file systems: SFS Capacity-Oriented and SFS Turbo. SFS Turbo is classified into SFS Turbo Standard and SFS Turbo Performance.
The following table describes the features, advantages, and application scenarios of these file system types.
File System Type |
Storage Class |
Feature |
Advantage |
Application Scenario |
---|---|---|---|---|
SFS Capacity-Oriented |
- |
NOTE:
|
Large capacity, high bandwidth, and low cost |
Cost-sensitive services which require large-capacity scalability, such as media processing, file sharing, HPC, and data backup SFS Turbo file systems are recommended because SFS Capacity-Oriented file systems are not suitable for massive volume of small file services. |
SFS Turbo |
SFS Turbo Standard |
|
Low latency and tenant exclusive |
Services with massive small files, such as code storage, log storage, web services, and virtual desktop |
SFS Turbo Standard - Enhanced |
|
Low latency, high bandwidth, and tenant exclusive |
Services with massive small files and services that require high-bandwidth, such as code storage, file sharing, enterprise office automation (OA), and log storage. |
|
SFS Turbo Performance |
|
Low latency, high IOPS, and tenant exclusive |
Services with massive small files, random I/O-intensive and latency-sensitive services, such as high-performance websites, file sharing, and content management |
|
SFS Turbo Performance - Enhanced |
|
Low latency, high IOPS, high bandwidth, and tenant exclusive |
Services with massive small files, latency-sensitive services that require high bandwidth, such as image rendering, AI training, and enterprise OA. |