>>>>> "bmm" == Bogdan M Maryniuk <bogdan.maryn...@gmail.com> writes: >>>>> "tt" == Toby Thain <t...@telegraphics.com.au> writes:
bmm> That's why I think that speaking "My $foo crashes therefore it bmm> is all crap" is bad idea: either help to fix it or just don't bmm> use it, First, people are allowed to speak and share information, and yes, even complain, without helping to fix things. You do not get to silence people who lack the talent, time, and interest to fix problems. Everyone's allowed to talk here. Second, I do use ZFS. But I keep a backup pool. And although my primary pool is iSCSI-based, the backup pools are direct-attached. Thanks to the open discussion on the list, I know that using iSCSI puts me at higher risk of pool loss. I know I need to budget for the backup pool equipment if I want to switch from $oldfilesystem to ZFS and not take a step down in reliability. I know that, while there is no time-consuming fsck to draw out downtime, pretty much every corruption event results in ``restore the pool from backup'' which takes a while, so I need to expect that by, for example, being prepared to run critical things directly off the backup pools. Finally, I know that ZFS pool corruption almost always results in loss of the whole pool, while other filesystem corruption tends to do crazier things which cappen to be less catastrophic to my particular dataset: some files but not all are lost after fsck, some files remain but lose their names, or more usefully retain their names but lose the name of one of their parent directories, the insides of some files are silently corrupted. There's actionable information in here. Technical discussion is worth more than sucks/rules armwrestling. bmm> The same way, if you have a mirror of USB hard drives, then bmm> swap cables and reboot — your mirror gone. But that's not bmm> because of ZFS, if you will look more closely... actually I think you are the one not looking closely enough. You say no one is losing pools, and then 10min later reply to a post about running zdb on a lost pool. You shouldn't need me to tell you something's wrong. When you limit your thesis to ``ZFS rules'' and then actively mislead people, we all lose. tt> /. is no person... right, so I use a word like ad hominem, and you stray from the main point to say ``Erm ayctually your use of rhetorical terminology is incorrect.'' maybe, maybe not, whatever, but again [x2], the posts in the slashdot thread complaining about corruption were just pointers to original posts on this list, so attacking the forum where you saw the pointer instead of the content of its destination really is clearly _ad hominem_. *brrk* *brr* ``no! no it's not ad hominem! it's a different word! ah, ha ah thought' you'd slip one past me there eh?'' QUIT BEING SO DAMNED ADD. We can get nowhere. As for the posts being rubbish, you and I both know it's plausible speculation that Apple delayed unleashing ZFS on their consumers because of the lost pool problems. ZFS doesn't suck, I do use it, I hope and predict it will get better---so just back off and calm down with the rotten fruit. But neither who's saying it nor your not wanting to hear it makes it less plausible.
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