It would be extremely helpful to know what brands/models of disks lie and which 
don't.  This information could be provided diplomatically simply as threads 
documenting problems you are working on, stating the facts.  Use of a specific 
string of words would make searching for it easy.  There should be no 
liability, since you are simply documenting compatibility with zfs.  

Or perhaps if the lawyers let you, you could simply publish a 
compatibility/incompatibility list.  These ARE facts. 

If there is a way to make a detection tool, that would be very useful too, 
although after the purchase is made, it could be hard to send it back.  However 
that info could be fed into the database as that drive/model being incompatible 
with zfs.

As Solaris / zfs gains ground, this could become a strong driver in the 
industry.

Re: I'll run tests with known-broken disks to determine how far back we
need to go in practice -- I'll bet one txg is almost always enough.

So go back three - we are using zfs because we want absolute reliability (or at 
least as close as we can get).

--Ray
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