Erik Trimble wrote:
the "zfs send" and "zfs receive" commands can be used analogously to
"ufsdump" and "ufsrestore".
You'll have to create the root pool by hand when doing a system
restore, but it's not really any different than having to partition
the disk under the old ufs-way.
So, use "z
On Wed, May 13, 2009 at 11:32 AM, Erik Trimble wrote:
> the "zfs send" and "zfs receive" commands can be used analogously to
> "ufsdump" and "ufsrestore".
>
> You'll have to create the root pool by hand when doing a system restore, but
> it's not really any different than having to partition the d
Dedhi Sujatmiko wrote:
> Dear all,
>
> given a DVD drive and DAT Tape Drive, and using Solaris 10 U7 (5/09),
> how can we plan for a total backup of ZFS root disk and procedure to
> recover that?
> Previously using UFS, we just need to use boot from Solaris OS DVD
> media, also using ufsdump, u
the "zfs send" and "zfs receive" commands can be used analogously to
"ufsdump" and "ufsrestore".
You'll have to create the root pool by hand when doing a system restore,
but it's not really any different than having to partition the disk
under the old ufs-way.
So, use "zfs send" to write the
Dear all,
given a DVD drive and DAT Tape Drive, and using Solaris 10 U7 (5/09),
how can we plan for a total backup of ZFS root disk and procedure to
recover that?
Previously using UFS, we just need to use boot from Solaris OS DVD
media, also using ufsdump, ufsrestore and installboot.
Anybody