@Abhijit Roy Out of interest, do you have a rough diagram you could post of what you intend so far? It'll help with working out if something is missing. Also, about the earlier question on a fencing device, I work with smaller setups, so I haven't needed to use one personally, but if you are working in a power-unstable site, then I would recommend it. Users in South Africa, especially, have to do "exciting" things with their infrastructure due to the daily rolling blackouts and being able to time an outage before a storm hits can be convenient; after all, the infrastructure to talk to the site could "go missing".
My understanding with Ceph is that due to the data needing to be near-line, the Ceph storage is replicated on each Proxmox node. With two units being storage, what you propose sounds more like a SAN-style arrangement, typically using NFS over the network to the nodes? Having said that, I recommend reading the proxmox documentation more closely, as the Ceph requirements were pretty exacting.
Although it is very simplified, a lot can be learned from a low-power deployment which uses Ceph [I'm investigating a solar-powered cluster]:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JfZuZ6zE7AI&ab_channel=RaidOwl
And there is a failure tolerant setup which can be learned from:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=74hor7682CI&ab_channel=ElectronicsWizardry
I find that a lot can be learned from people demonstrating things in the field, Youtube technical videos have a wealth of experience and ideas to bring to the table. No need to rush after all.
Note: Now, as an aside on Nutanix, I do remember sitting through one of their demonstrations and quickly determining the cost was exorbitant compared to simply doing everything myself on proxmox. Having said that, the free cold Coffee kit was rather nice.
My understanding with Ceph is that due to the data needing to be near-line, the Ceph storage is replicated on each Proxmox node. With two units being storage, what you propose sounds more like a SAN-style arrangement, typically using NFS over the network to the nodes? Having said that, I recommend reading the proxmox documentation more closely, as the Ceph requirements were pretty exacting.
Although it is very simplified, a lot can be learned from a low-power deployment which uses Ceph [I'm investigating a solar-powered cluster]:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JfZuZ6zE7AI&ab_channel=RaidOwl
And there is a failure tolerant setup which can be learned from:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=74hor7682CI&ab_channel=ElectronicsWizardry
I find that a lot can be learned from people demonstrating things in the field, Youtube technical videos have a wealth of experience and ideas to bring to the table. No need to rush after all.
Note: Now, as an aside on Nutanix, I do remember sitting through one of their demonstrations and quickly determining the cost was exorbitant compared to simply doing everything myself on proxmox. Having said that, the free cold Coffee kit was rather nice.