I have had disks, that work “perfectly" under UFS and various RAID controllers 
(and DOS and Windows), but always reported checksum errors when running under 
ZFS. It would happen on any motherboard or controller. That made me never use 
anything but ZFS on data that I cannot recreate 100%, fast… but that is 
separate story. I labeled those disks bad and they sit in my “museum”. Needless 
to say some were brand new. Not saying you have this issue, but sharing 
anecdotal evidence.

But I wonder how you discovered you had corruption with UFS? What is observed?

It might well be, that FreeBSD is more agressive with your motherboard/chipset 
or does not implement known quirk of that — which might trigger some edge cases 
for the SSD. Ultimately, if you can move that SSD to another motherboard and 
test it, it would confirm where the issue is.

Daniel

> On 25 Feb 2020, at 3:35, Mario Olofo <mario.ol...@gmail.com> wrote:
> 
> Hi Mike, thanks for the insight.
> 
> I tried both, but not at the same time.
> When I found that the ZFS was corrupting the filesystem, I reinstalled the
> FreeBSD using UFS but no luck.
> Ulf told me that he had the same problem and it turned out the problem was
> a defective RAM, but here I just ran the test 2 times,
> one from Dell BIOS Diagnostics Tool and other from mdsched.exe from Windos
> 10, but here the RAM is ok...
> 
> Thank you again,
> 
> Mario
> 

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