>>>>> "mp" == Mattias Pantzare <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
mp> Or the file was corrupted when you transfered it. he stored the backup streams on ZFS, so obviously they couldn't possibly be corrupt. :p Jonathan, does 'zfs receive -nv' also detect the checksum error, or is it only detected when you actually receive onto a pool without -n? in addition to skipping to the next header of corrupted tarballs, tar can validate a tarball's checksums without extracting it, so it's possible to write a tape, then read it to see if it's ok. The 'tar t' read test checks for medium errors, driver bugs, and bugs inside tar itself. so it sounds like: brrk, brrk, danger, do not use zfs send/receive for backups---use only for moving filesystems from one pool to another. This brings back the question ``how is it possible to back up and restore a heavily-cloned/snapshotted system?'' because upon restore the clone inheritance tree is lost, and you'll never have enough space in the pool to fit what was there before.
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