Thinking about it, I think Darren is right. An automatic send/receive to the external drive may be preferable, and it sounds like it has many advantages:
1. It's directional, your backups will always go from your live drive to the backup, never the other way unless you actually force it with -f. 2. It protects any changes on your backup drive. 3. It doesn't affect the performance of your original drive. 4. You can run the actual send/receive at a lower priority (could it be throttled too?), reducing the impact on the system. 5. Differently sized disks work fine, and in fact a larger external disk potentially allows you to store more snapshots on there than on your live system. 6. Tim Foster already has something like this working: http://blogs.sun.com/timf/entry/zfs_automatic_backup_0_1 The only things missing that I can think of are ETA calculations for send / receive, and the fact that I'm not sure how you would boot or restore from it. A manual restore process wouldn't be too much of a hassle though, and if we're honest, an ETA or even a progress indicator for zfs send/receive would be a godsend for Solaris anyway. After all, don't you just love it when you're backing up a 2TB storage array and your boss says "how long is that going to take", and your only answer is "haven't a clue boss. Theoretically around 8 hours". -- This message posted from opensolaris.org _______________________________________________ zfs-discuss mailing list zfs-discuss@opensolaris.org http://mail.opensolaris.org/mailman/listinfo/zfs-discuss