Here is the problem I'm trying to solve...

Ive been using a sparc machine as my primary home server for years. A few years 
back the motherboard died. I did a nightly backup on an external USB drive 
formatted in ufs format. I use a rsync based backup called dirvish, so I 
thought I had all the bases covered. I basically mount the USB drive, do the 
backup, and then unmount the drive. This guarantees that (except while it's 
mounted) the backup filesystem is relatively safe from glitches.

I quickly brought up an x86 machine but found it couldn't read the ufs drive 
(endian issue). I tried Linux which claims it could read either endian ufs 
without success.

So, I picked up another sparc machine to get me up and running again. However, 
I'm now in the same boat if it dies.

Now I need to downgrade the sparc machine to Solaris 8 (work related reasons), 
so I migrated all my services to an Opteron Sunfire server running SCXR b49 
with a zfs mirrored pool. However, root is on a non-mirrored ufs partition so I 
still would like to start the full backups onto the USB drive again.

I want to avoid the ufs endian issue, so I figure that zfs is the right format 
to use on the drive. It's not clear whether this is possible. I thought that 
using a zfs import/export into it's own pool would work, but I wanted to run it 
through here for comments first. Then if the system dies, I can restore files 
quickly from any architecture server.

BTW, zfs rocks!

Gary
 
 
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