> From: zfs-discuss-boun...@opensolaris.org [mailto:zfs-discuss- > boun...@opensolaris.org] On Behalf Of Jonathan Walker > > New to ZFS, I made a critical error when migrating data and > configuring zpools according to needs - I stored a snapshot stream to > a file using "zfs send -R [filesystem]@[snapshot] >[stream_file]".
There are precisely two reasons why it's not recommended to store a zfs send datastream for later use. As long as you can acknowledge and accept these limitations, then sure, go right ahead and store it. ;-) A lot of people do, and it's good. #1 A single bit error causes checksum mismatch and then the whole data stream is not receivable. Obviously you encountered this problem already, and you were able to work around. If I were you, however, I would be skeptical about data integrity on your system. You said you scrubbed and corrected a couple of errors, but that's not actually possible. The filesystem integrity checksums are for detection, not correction, of corruption. The only way corruption gets corrected is when there's a redundant copy of the data... Then ZFS can discard the corrupt copy, overwrite with a good copy, and all the checksums suddenly match. Of course there is no such thing in the zfs send data stream - no redundant copy in the data stream. So yes, you have corruption. The best you can possibly do is to identify where it is, and then remove the affected files. #2 You cannot do a partial receive, nor generate a catalog of the files within the datastream. You can restore the whole filesystem or nothing. _______________________________________________ zfs-discuss mailing list zfs-discuss@opensolaris.org http://mail.opensolaris.org/mailman/listinfo/zfs-discuss