[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: > Very true, you could even pay people to track down heavy users and > bonk them on the head. Why is everyone responding with alternate routes to > a simple need?
For the simple reason that sometimes it is good to challenge existing practice and try and find the real need rather than "I need X because I've always done it using X". We always used a vfstab and dfstab (or exportfs) file before and used a separate software RAID and filesystem before too. > User quotas have been used in the past, and will be used in > the future because they work (well), are simple, tied into many existing > workflows/systems and very understandable for both end users and > administrators. You can come up with 100 other ways to accomplish psudo > user quotas or end runs around the core issue (did we really have google > space farming suggested -- we are reading a FS mailing list here?), but > quotas are tested and well understood fixes to these problems. Just > because someone decided to call ZFS pool reservations quotas does not mean > the need for real user quotas is gone. Reservations in ZFS are quite different to Quotas, ZFS has both concepts. A reservation is a guaranteed minimum, a quota in ZFS is a guaranteed maximum. -- Darren J Moffat _______________________________________________ zfs-discuss mailing list zfs-discuss@opensolaris.org http://mail.opensolaris.org/mailman/listinfo/zfs-discuss