OpenSolaris Boot Support For ZFS Root FS on x86 and SPARC 50
Derkjan de Haan writes "I am glad to see progress is being made on the the ability of OpenSolaris to boot from a ZFS filesystem: 'This putback provides the ability to boot the Solaris Operating System from a ZFS root file system on both x86 and SPARC platforms. Full ZFS boot and install support will be available in a subsequent build. Because of the phased putback, we recommend waiting for the full boot and install support rather than attempting to use the ZFS boot features separately.'"
Am I missing something? (Score:4, Informative)
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Re:Am I missing something? (Score:4, Funny)
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OpenSolaris finally being able to boot from ZFS is cool, but⦠has dick-all to do with BSD
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Honk! Honk! (Score:5, Informative)
Re:WTF is putback ? (Score:5, Informative)
Re:WTF is putback ? (Score:5, Informative)
a 'putback' is just a formal way to submit your updated source code to a source code control system (what is called a 'gate').
and in fact, the matching command is (yes, you guessed it) 'bringover'. seriously, it is.
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Big Mac's a Big Mac, but they call it JBigMac.
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[ot] *BSD is Dying (Score:2)
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SunOS was BSD. Solaris is AT&T. See Wikipedia or something for the details of Sun's confusing naming and numbering scheme.
Booting isn't so interesting (Score:4, Interesting)
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While I like ZFS, it's really not all that "NEW". It's just a re-implementation of things available commercially.
That makes it inexpensive, which is good for many -- but critical systems have been doing this kind of disk management for a very long time now.
Who cares about BSD... (Score:3, Interesting)
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Re:Who cares about BSD... (Score:5, Informative)
As to when Linux will get support for ZFS, it requires one of two things to happen. Either Linux developers need to do a clean-room reimplementation of ZFS, or they need to modify their license to one that isn't incompatible with many other Free Software licenses , including the CDDL.
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Or Linux needs to get user mode filesystems up to the point you can store your mission-critical data on them.
ZFS has been written ported to linux, I tried it last year but one of my tests was to pull power to the drive while it was mounted (but not doing anything) I lost all data on the drive beyond (easy) recovery. My conclusion, it isn't ready for use on a Linux server yet.
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FUSE is quite stable. It's ZFS FUSE that's unstable.
-:sigma.SB
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The problem is the current linux implmenetation of ZFS-FUSE.
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Except on fuse either when Sun goes GPL 2, or when both Sun and Linux goes GPL 3, or if Linux stop being GPL at all but uhm, yeah right
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Yup the day we get those sort of rouge kernel hackers well get zfs in linux, but until then due to suns choice of license its not going to happen any soo
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Unfortunately, Linux kernel hackers are mostly license conscious. I also hear that they are mostly azure, like the Smurfs.
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The code is out there. You're welcome to use it following the license under which it was released.
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