Thanks, sounds awesome! Pretty much takes away my concern of using ZFS!
Stu
>
> >Now that is interesting. But how do you do a receive before you reinstall?
> >Live cd??
>
>
> Just boot off of the CD (or jumpstart server) to single user mode. Format
> your new disk, create a zpool, zfs recv, i
> > would be very annoying if ZFS barfed on a technicality and I had to
> > reinstall the whole OS because of a kernel panic and an unbootable system.
>
> It shouldn't do that.
I agree but it seems like other people had it happen.
> Plus, if you look around a bit, you'll find some tutorials to
> > Hi. I have a spare off the shelf consumer PC and was thinking about loading
> > Solaris on it for a development box since I use Studio @work and like it
> > better than gcc. I was thinking maybe it isn't so smart to use ZFS since it
> > has only one drive. If ZFS detects something bad it might
I have a chance to pick up a system at a reasonable price built with an AMD
FX8120 8 core 3.1 GHz on a Gigabyte motherboard. Is anybody runing with this
combo? Looking for info from an actual user. Thanks.
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> I would recommend solaris 11 express based on personal experience. It
> gets bugfixes and new features sooner than commercial solaris.
I thought they stopped making 11 Express available when 11 went out?
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> LOL. Well, for what it's worth, there are three common pronunciations for
> btrfs. Butterfs, Betterfs, and B-Tree FS (because it's based on b-trees.)
> Check wikipedia. (This isn't really true, but I like to joke, after
> saying something like that, I wrote the wikipedia page just now.) ;-)
Please ignore this post. Bad things happened and now there is another thread
for it. Thank you.
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I installed a Solaris 10 development box on a 500G root mirror and later I
received some smaller drives. I learned from this list its better to have
the root mirror on the smaller small drives and then create another mirror
on the original 500G drives so I copied everything that was on the small
dr
> Actually, you do want /usr and much of /var on the root pool, they
> are integral parts of the "svc:/filesystem/local" needed to bring up
> your system to a useable state (regardless of whether the other
> pools are working or not).
Ok. I have my feelings on that topic but they may not be as rel
> All (Ultra)SPARC T2, T2+, and T3 CPUs should have these capabilities; if
> you have some other CPU the capabilities are probably not present. Run
> 'prtdiag | head -20' to see the CPUs on your system/s; run cryptoadm(1M)
> with the "list" option (Solaris 10+) to see the software and hardware
> p
Hello Bob! Thanks for the reply. I was thinking about going with a 3 way
mirror and a hot spare. But I don't think I can upgrade to larger drives
unless I do it all at once, is that correct?
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Hello Marty!
> With four drives you could also make a RAIDZ3 set, allowing you to have
> the lowest usable space, poorest performance and worst resilver times
> possible.
That's not funny. I was actually considering this :p
But you have to admit, it would probably be somewhat reliable!
Has there been any change to the server hardware with respect to number of
drives since ZFS has come out? Many of the servers around still have an even
number of drives (2, 4) etc. and it seems far from optimal from a ZFS
standpoint. All you can do is make one or two mirrors, or a 3 way mirror and
Hi ladies and gents, I've got a new Solaris 10 development box with ZFS
mirror root using 500G drives. I've got several extra 320G drives and I'm
wondering if there's any way I can use these to good advantage in this
box. I've got enough storage for my needs with the 500G pool. At this point
I woul
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