- What's New
- Function Overview
- Service Overview
- Getting Started
- User Guide
- Best Practices
- API Reference
- SDK Reference
- Troubleshooting
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FAQs
- Concepts
- Specifications
- Restrictions
- Networks
- Billing
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Others
- How Do I Access a File System from a Server?
- How Do I Check Whether a File System on a Linux Server Is Available?
- What Resources Does SFS Occupy?
- Can a File System Be Accessed Across Multiple AZs?
- How Can I Migrate Data Between SFS and EVS?
- Can I Directly Access SFS from On-premises Devices?
- How Do I Delete .nfs Files?
- How Can I Improve the Copy and Delete Efficiency with an SFS Turbo File System?
- How Do Second- and Third-level Directory Permissions of an SFS Turbo File System Be Inherited?
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Application Scenarios
SFS Turbo
Expandable to 320 TB, SFS Turbo provides a fully hosted shared file storage. It features high availability and durability to support massive small files and applications requiring low latency and high IOPS. SFS Turbo is perfect to scenarios such as high-performance websites, log storage, compression and decompression, DevOps, enterprise offices, and container applications.
- High-performance websites
For I/O-intensive website services, SFS Turbo can provide shared website source code directories for multiple web servers, enabling low-latency and high-IOPS concurrent share access.
- Log storage
SFS Turbo can provide multiple service nodes for shared log output directories, facilitating log collection and management of distributed applications.
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