".zfs" even does not exist. It is a pseudo directory supported by ZFS for its builtin automount. Every snapshot is a separate FS mounted in place.
For example: noname:/home/.zfs/snapshot/zfs-auto-snap_hourly-2025-09-03-0601 $ mount | grep home noname/home on /home type zfs (rw,relatime,xattr,noacl,casesensitive) noname/home@zfs-auto-snap_hourly-2025-09-03-0601 on /home/.zfs/snapshot/zfs-auto-snap_hourly-2025-09-03-0601 type zfs (ro,relatime,xattr,noacl,casesensitive) To make this mount appear you have to "cd" there. On Wednesday, September 24, 2025 at 11:53:34 AM UTC+3 Andreas Rogge wrote: > Hi Stefan, > > I guess in this case I'd just go with a client-side script that > discovers the directories. > So in the FileSet you would have something like > File = "\\|/full/path/to/your/script" > > The script is then supposed to discover the directories and print them > on stdout. > > Hope that helps! > > Best Regards, > Andreas > > -- > Andreas Rogge [email protected] > Bareos GmbH & Co. KG Phone: +49 221-630693-86 <+49%20221%2063069386> > http://www.bareos.com > > Sitz der Gesellschaft: Köln | Amtsgericht Köln: HRA 29646 > Komplementär: Bareos Verwaltungs-GmbH > Geschäftsführer: Stephan Dühr, Jörg Steffens, Philipp Storz > > -- You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "bareos-users" group. To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email to [email protected]. To view this discussion visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/bareos-users/ae3856bf-34c5-4718-86e0-5272fe5a33a5n%40googlegroups.com.
