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Date:      Tue, 2 Jun 2009 22:39:17 +0300
From:      Dan Naumov <dan.naumov@gmail.com>
To:        Zaphod Beeblebrox <zbeeble@gmail.com>
Cc:        freebsd-stable@freebsd.org
Subject:   Re: ZFS NAS configuration question
Message-ID:  <cf9b1ee00906021239t17d25cbcx4affa4416b9ad783@mail.gmail.com>
In-Reply-To: <5f67a8c40906021147h48bc1c36y5de42fdc0d18677e@mail.gmail.com>
References:  <cf9b1ee00905301141t1945c053x43ce915b7085326e@mail.gmail.com> <8B50CE3F-FCC5-42D6-8FFE-591178F3DFB6@ish.com.au> <5f67a8c40906021147h48bc1c36y5de42fdc0d18677e@mail.gmail.com>

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This reminds me. I was reading the release and upgrade notes of OpenSolaris
2009.6 and noted one thing about upgrading from a previous version to the
new one::

When you pick the "upgrade OS" option in the OpenSolaris installer, it will
check if you are using a ZFS root partition and if you do, it intelligently
suggests to take a current snapshot of the root filesystem. After you finish
the upgrade and do a reboot, the boot menu offers you the option of booting
the new upgraded version of the OS or alternatively _booting from the
snapshot taken by the upgrade installation procedure_.

Reading that made me pause for a second and made me go "WOW", this is how
UNIX system upgrades should be done. Any hope of us lowly users ever seeing
something like this implemented in FreeBSD? :)

- Dan Naumov





On Tue, Jun 2, 2009 at 9:47 PM, Zaphod Beeblebrox <zbeeble@gmail.com> wrote:

>
>
> The system boots from a pair of drives in a gmirror.  Mot because you can't
> boot from ZFS, but because it's just so darn stable (and it predates the use
> of ZFS).
>
> Really there are two camps here --- booting from ZFS is the use of ZFS as
> the machine's own filesystem.  This is one goal of ZFS that is somewhat
> imperfect on FreeBSD at the momment.  ZFS file servers are another goal
> where booting from ZFS is not really required and only marginally
> beneficial.
>
>
>



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