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TrueNAS – Open Enterprise Storage

What We Heard at NAB 2026 | TrueNAS - Open Enterprise Storage TrueNAS V160 Launched: High Performance, No All-Flash Tax TrueNAS 26 Is Here: What's New in This Major Release TrueNAS Connect: Enterprise Features on Your Own Hardware TrueNAS Immutability: Multi-Layered Data Protection & Ransomware Defense TrueNAS CEO Note to Community: We Are All TrueNAS TrueNAS 25.10.2 Goldeye: 100+ Fixes & What's New TrueNAS Names Brett Davis CEO for Enterprise Growth TrueNAS Plans for 2026: TrueNAS 26 & OpenZFS 2.4 Roadmap TrueNAS Connect Plus Now Available for All Community Users TrueNAS R60: High-Speed NVMe Storage for AI Workloads Introducing TrueNAS WebShare: Secure Web-Based File Sharing TrueNAS 25.10.1: Goldeye Matures, Performs, and Connects TrueNAS & Veeam v13: Turnkey Cyber‑Resilient Backups Customer Advantages of the TrueNAS Open Core Model TrueNAS Named Data Storage Company of the Year 2025 TrueNAS 25.10: Smarter, Streamlined Updates & Tools TrueNAS F-Series Shines at IBC with Two “Best of Show” Awards TrueNAS 25.10 “Goldeye”: NVMe‑oF, Unified, Simplified Storage Introducing TrueNAS Connect: Secure Monitoring & Alerts The ESG Advantage of Open Enterprise Architecture: Why TrueNAS Is the Sustainable Choice | TrueNAS - Open TrueNAS 25.10-RC1: New Features, Fixes & OpenZFS 2.3.4 Seamless Setup: Exploring TrueNAS Web-Driven Installation | TrueNAS - Open Enterprise Storage TrueNAS 25.10 “Goldeye” BETA is Available TrueNAS 25.10 “Goldeye” Highlights TrueNAS 25.04.2: Fangtooth restores Virtualization iXsystems Rebrands as TrueNAS to Reflect Market Momentum in Enterprise Storage | TrueNAS - Open Enterprise June 1 - Apps Migration Deadline for TrueNAS 24.04 and 23.10 TrueNAS 25.04.1: Fangtooth Unification Gains Momentum TrueNAS 24.10.2.2 Prepares for IP Addressing of Apps TrueNAS H30 and F100 add Fast Dedup with TrueNAS 25.04 Meet TrueNAS Community Edition – The Future of Open Storage TrueNAS Apps Made Easy with Electric Eel & Fangtooth TrueNAS H30 Secures Two ‘Best of Show’ Honors at NAB 2025 | TrueNAS - Open Enterprise Storage TrueNAS H30 Wins Best of Show Awards at NAB 2025 TrueNAS 25.04: Fangtooth is RELEASED Slash Your Virtualization Costs with TrueNAS Storage TrueCommand 3.1 Enhances Management and Monitoring TrueNAS 25.04: Fangtooth Unification Begins with New Features Fangtooth Unification Begins | TrueNAS iXsystems Experiences Record Growth in TrueNAS Enterprise Storage, Spins Off Server Business to Amaara How to Set Up and Install TrueNAS CORE Yes, You Can (Still) Virtualize TrueNAS TrueNAS enables Container Storage and Kubernetes | TrueNAS - Open Enterprise Storage TrueNAS 12.0-U2 is Released | TrueNAS - Open Enterprise Storage OpenZFS 2.0 Ships First on TrueNAS | TrueNAS - Open Enterprise Storage TrueNAS 12.0-U1 is Scheduled for early December | TrueNAS - Open Enterprise Storage iXsystems TrueNAS M60 Recognized as SDC Awards Storage Hardware Innovation of the Year Finalist | TrueNAS - TrueNAS 12.0 is Released! 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OpenZFS vs. the Competition | TrueNAS - Open Enterprise Storage
Joshua Smith · 2016-04-04 · via TrueNAS – Open Enterprise Storage

openzfs_logo-1-300x274.png


What’s in your file system?

“My data” is a reasonable answer but if you take that data seriously, you should take a moment to think about the actual underlying file system that you are trusting to keep your data safe. After all, the file system is the most critical component in doing so. The countless storage products on the market use a myriad of different “production ready” file systems, and these file systems vary dramatically in the precautions they take to guarantee the integrity of your data. From “bit rot” to machine and human error, you can assume that the majority of storage solutions are not taking any data integrity precautions beyond some form of simple redundancy. Let’s examine what the most popular file systems do and don’t do to protect your data, and why every storage solution available from iXsystems uses the OpenZFS file system.

Storage solutions broadly fall into four categories: SoHo NAS systems, Cloud-based solutions, Enterprise NAS and SAN solutions, and Microsoft Storage Server solutions. Of these, the SoHo NAS and Cloud-based solutions can have quite a bit in common because they’re both focused on delivering commodity products and services. To keep costs down, these budget-conscious “black box” solutions typically employ GNU/Linux file systems such as Ext3, Ext4, XFS and Btrfs, and hardware or software RAID for redundancy. With the exception of Btrfs, none of these components are taking any precautions against bit rot or the damage that can be done by an interrupted write to disk. They also offer primitive at best snapshotting and rollback options to mitigate human error, and do not facilitate the verifiable importing and exporting of your data. Btrfs does aim to deliver many of the features found in OpenZFS but in its current state, Btrfs suffers from space accounting issues, a limited volume manager, and general administrative complexity. A search for “Btrfs petabyte” will show that few, if any users are deploying Btrfs at scale, let alone in production.

By contrast, traditional NAS and SAN vendors like EMC and NetApp do make concerted efforts to provide data integrity guarantees but they do so using proprietary file systems that lock you into their platforms which become quite costly as they scale. The de facto IT vendor Microsoft offers ReFS as a modern alternative to the ubiquitous NTFS file system, but ReFS appears to share a fate similar to Btrfs: Not yet ready for production and not yet the default file system for Microsoft’s own storage products.

Enter OpenZFS

All of the above storage solutions represent de facto standards in one way or another and there comes a time when such standards need to be thrown out and replaced with something new. The OpenZFS project is exactly that decision and is easily the greatest achievement of Sun Microsystems’ Open Source push a decade ago. OpenZFS is a modern, Open Source file system for modern architectures, and takes more data integrity precautions than any file system before it or since. OpenZFS uses the power of modern CPUs to checksum and validate data at every step to detect data integrity errors A.K.A. “bit rot”, before they reach your application.

OpenZFS can also:

  • Repair detected bit rot with sophisticated distributed parity and mirror-based redundancy strategies
  • Alleviate machine errors with a copy-on-write architecture
  • Mitigate human error with snapshots, cloning, and rollback
  • Accelerate arrays with a hybrid flash logging and caching architecture
  • Replicate verifiably to other LAN and WAN-based OpenZFS systems
  • Scale by design beyond the capacity of contemporary hardware
  • Advance relentlessly thanks to a strong Open Source community
  • Deliver high-availability with the TrueNAS enterprise storage platform

OpenZFS is the most complete and battle-tested file system available, especially when it comes to protecting your data from corruption or loss. From the FreeNAS Mini through the multi-petabyte TrueNAS Z35, iXsystems has a storage solution powered by OpenZFS that is ready to meet your file sharing, backup, virtualization, and media needs. Visit us or call 855-473-7449 to learn more about iXsystems storage solutions.

Michael Dexter
Senior Analyst