3 - Getting started with OpenBSD
stores large amounts of data to have one Big Block of Storage. This is usually a bad design. You
will usually find it much better to break up your storage into manageable blocks. This has many
advantages, two of the biggest being that you can add more storage later
when you need it easily
(you weren't going to get the requirements estimate right, no one ever does), and you can buy a
small
amount of storage now, and add much more later when the price will have most likely
dropped and the capacity will have increased.
●
Avoid cheap network adapters: OpenBSD supports a plethora of cheap network adapters.
These adapters work great in home systems, and low or moderate
throughput business and
research environments. But, if you need high throughput and low impact on your server, you are
better off buying a quality network adapter. Unfortunately, some
name-brand adapters are not
much better than the cheap adapters, and some potentially good adapters do not have accurate
documentation available to write good drivers. Gigabit adapters
often perform better than
10Mbps/100Mbps adapters, even when used on slower speed networks, due to superior buffering.
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