There is a ZFS roadmap in this website somewhere... but I cannot find it...
Appreciate if someone put it at the zfs home page.
Anyway, here is what I understand (I'm not an authority here). After U2 release
(which will have ZFS), the next batch of main updates is U4.
cheers!
e1
This message pos
UNIX admin wrote:
Adding crypto to ZFS isn't that hard once we have
IEEE 1619 mode
(AES LRW) implemented in the crypto framework aes
module(s).
Dealing with the key management is very hard because
thats the critical
bit to making it both usable and secure.
(Scratching head)
If I had to solve t
> Adding crypto to ZFS isn't that hard once we have
> IEEE 1619 mode
> (AES LRW) implemented in the crypto framework aes
> module(s).
>
> Dealing with the key management is very hard because
> thats the critical
> bit to making it both usable and secure.
(Scratching head)
If I had to solve this p
Jürgen Keil wrote:
This is apparently a known issue:
Bug ID: 6381203
Synopsis: deadlock due to i/o while assigning (tc_lock held)
http://bugs.opensolaris.org/bugdatabase/view_bug.do?bug_id=6381203
Fixed in build 36.
- Bart
--
Bart Smaalders Solaris Kernel Performance
[EMAIL
UNIX admin wrote:
It's a bit of work to set up, and it's not supported.
x86 only for now.
You still need a UFS slice somewhere to hold the boot
archive. But it does work; my 2 x 2 GHz amd box
boots
w/ zfs root.
Once grub groks zfs, the need for the slice will go
away.
You mean you have a UFS
On 3/9/06, UNIX admin <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > I'd rather run straight UFS than have to ever deal
> > with SVM/SDS again.
> Why?
> SVM has really come a long way. It's integrated into Solaris by default and
> very reliable.
> I can't count the number of times SVM has saved me, not to mentio
> However I only want the following :
>
> (1) Take three disks and make a ZFS filesystem
> (2) set the compression option on.
> (2) Share it out via NFS
>
> Thats it. That is all.
The last time I tried this (two weeks ago, ~snv_34, only one disk
in the zpool), ZFS on the NFS4 server
> I'd rather run straight UFS than have to ever deal
> with SVM/SDS again.
Why?
SVM has really come a long way. It's integrated into Solaris by default and
very reliable. I can't count the number of times SVM has saved me, not to
mention increased I/O performance if configured correctly.
This
> It's a bit of work to set up, and it's not supported.
> x86 only for now.
> You still need a UFS slice somewhere to hold the boot
> archive. But it does work; my 2 x 2 GHz amd box
> boots
> w/ zfs root.
>
> Once grub groks zfs, the need for the slice will go
> away.
You mean you have a UFS /bo
> Well I can tell you that I am still sitting on the
> fence here.
>
> Its not an uncomfortable position either.
>
> On the one hand I can just install Solaris 10 Update
> 1 and create the
> fielsystem that I need with SVM and life goes on.
> Apply power and
> then walk away.
>
> On the other h
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