Michelle Sullivan
http://www.mhix.org/
Sent from my iPad

> On 30 Apr 2019, at 17:10, Andrea Venturoli <m...@netfence.it> wrote:
> 
>> On 4/30/19 2:41 AM, Michelle Sullivan wrote:
>> 
>> The system was originally built on 9.0, and got upgraded through out the 
>> years... zfsd was not available back then.  So get your point, but maybe you 
>> didn’t realize this blog was a history of 8+ years?
> 
> That's one of the first things I thought about while reading the original 
> post: what can be inferred from it is that ZFS might not have been that good 
> in the past.
> It *could* still suffer from the same problems or it *could* have improved 
> and be more resilient.
> Answering that would be interesting...
> 

Without a doubt it has come a long way, but in my opinion, until there is a 
tool to walk the data (to transfer it out) or something that can either repair 
or invalidate metadata (such as a spacemap corruption) there is still a fatal 
flaw that makes it questionable to use... and that is for one reason alone 
(regardless of my current problems.)

Consider..

If one triggers such a fault on a production server, how can one justify 
transferring from backup multiple terabytes (or even petabytes now) of data to 
repair an unmountable/faulted array.... because all backup solutions I know 
currently would take days if not weeks to restore the sort of store ZFS is 
touted with supporting.  

Now, yes most production environments have multiple backing stores so will have 
a server or ten to switch to whilst the store is being recovered, but it still 
wouldn’t be a pleasant experience... not to mention the possibility that if one 
store is corrupted there is a chance that the other store(s) would also be 
affected in the same way if in the same DC... (Eg a DC fire - which I have 
seen) .. and if you have multi DC stores to protect from that.. size of the 
pipes between DCs comes clearly into play.

Thoughts?

Michelle


_______________________________________________
freebsd-stable@freebsd.org mailing list
https://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-stable
To unsubscribe, send any mail to "freebsd-stable-unsubscr...@freebsd.org"

Reply via email to