Thank you for you answer. So I was hoping that it'll work.
I intend to use a cache/log device. That's why I'll use the speediest
sata port. The cheap SSD didn't work my old PC.
Under 2 weeks I had an error on it. The "scrub" showed me. I don't want
to deal with any disk error.
Intel 3500/3700 S
On 11/ 3/14 07:55 PM, Brogyányi József wrote:
Hi
I'd like to add a SSD to my pool but I need to move the rpool mirror.
I have sata2 and sata3 ports. Of course rpool mirror occupied the
sata3 ports.
Do I need to issue any command before I move the rpool mirror?
I'll try to start only one rpool
On 11/ 3/14 07:36 PM, Bob Friesenhahn wrote:
Perhaps time_t is still an issue.
It is. 32-bit binaries will not be able to handle time_t values past
January 2038, whether in API's to get the current time or to access
timestamps on files.
https://blogs.oracle.com/alanc/entry/lp64_bit_by_bit#lp6
On Mon, 3 Nov 2014, Bruce Lilly wrote:
As of this late date, /usr/bin/bash here is in fact the bash executable,
not a link; but that means that it's 32-bit only and might well present
unexpected issues on 64-bit systems when dealing with large files etc.
(basically anything that involves pointer
On Sat, Oct 4, 2014 at 11:05 AM, cpforum wrote:
>
> cd /usr/bin
>
> mv bash bash-oi_151a9
>
> ln -s /usr/local/bin/bash bash
>
While that would be reasonable under many operating systems, it *may*
present problems on Solaris-derived systems, especially 64-bit systems.
See http://docs.oracle.com/
Hi
I'd like to add a SSD to my pool but I need to move the rpool mirror. I
have sata2 and sata3 ports. Of course rpool mirror occupied the sata3 ports.
Do I need to issue any command before I move the rpool mirror?
I'll try to start only one rpool drive on the new port then switch it
off when i