> From: Darren J Moffat [mailto:darr...@opensolaris.org]
> Sent: Friday, August 05, 2011 10:14 AM
>
> >> echo "set zfs:zil_disable = 1"> /etc/system
> >
> > This is a great way to cure /etc/system viruses :-)
>
> LOL!
:-)
Thank you.
___
zfs-discuss
On 08/05/11 15:09, Richard Elling wrote:
On Aug 5, 2011, at 6:14 AM, Darren J Moffat wrote:
On 08/05/11 13:11, Edward Ned Harvey wrote:
After a certain rev, I know you can set the "sync" property, and it
takes effect immediately, and it's persistent across reboots. But that
doesn't apply to S
On Aug 5, 2011, at 6:14 AM, Darren J Moffat wrote:
> On 08/05/11 13:11, Edward Ned Harvey wrote:
>> After a certain rev, I know you can set the "sync" property, and it
>> takes effect immediately, and it's persistent across reboots. But that
>> doesn't apply to Solaris 10.
>>
>> My question: Is
On 5 Aug 11, at 08:14 , Darren J Moffat wrote:
> On 08/05/11 13:11, Edward Ned Harvey wrote:
>>
>> My question: Is there any way to make Disabled ZIL a normal mode of
>> operations in solaris 10? Particularly:
>>
>> If I do this "echo zil_disable/W0t1 | mdb -kw" then I have to remount
>> the fil
On 05 August, 2011 - Darren J Moffat sent me these 0,9K bytes:
> On 08/05/11 13:11, Edward Ned Harvey wrote:
>> After a certain rev, I know you can set the "sync" property, and it
>> takes effect immediately, and it's persistent across reboots. But that
>> doesn't apply to Solaris 10.
>>
>> My que
On 08/05/11 13:11, Edward Ned Harvey wrote:
After a certain rev, I know you can set the "sync" property, and it
takes effect immediately, and it's persistent across reboots. But that
doesn't apply to Solaris 10.
My question: Is there any way to make Disabled ZIL a normal mode of
operations in so
After a certain rev, I know you can set the "sync" property, and it takes
effect immediately, and it's persistent across reboots. But that doesn't
apply to Solaris 10.
My question: Is there any way to make Disabled ZIL a normal mode of
operations in solaris 10? Particularly:
If I do th