In the previous and current responses, you seem quite determined of 
others misconceptions. Given that fact and the first paragraph of your 
response below, I think you can figure out why nobody on this list will 
reply to you again.

can you guess? wrote:
>> No, you aren't cool, and no it isn't about zfs or
>> your interest in it.  It was clear from the get-go
>> that netapp was paying you to troll any discussion on
>> it,
>>     
>
> It's (quite literally) amazing how the most incompetent individuals turn out 
> to be those who are the most certain of their misconceptions.  In fact, there 
> have been studies done that establish this as a statistically-significant 
> trait among that portion of the population - so at least you aren't alone in 
> this respect.
>
> For the record, I have no connection with NetApp, I have never had any 
> connection with NetApp (save for appreciating the elegance of their 
> products), they never in any way asked me to take any part in any discussion 
> on any subject whatsoever (let alone offered to pay me to do so), I don't 
> even *know* anyone at NetApp (at least that I'm aware of) save by 
> professional reputation.  In other words, you've got your head so far up your 
> ass that you're not only ready to make accusations that you do not (and in 
> fact could not) have any evidence to support, you're ready to make 
> accusations that are factually flat wrong.
>
> Simply because an individual of your caliber apparently cannot conceive of 
> the possibility that someone might take sufficient personal and professional 
> interest in a topic to devote actual time and effort to attempting to cut 
> through the hype that mostly well-meaning but less-than-objective and 
> largely-uncritical supporters are shoveling out?  Sheesh.
>
> ...
>  
>   
>> Yes, every point you've made could be refuted.
>>     
>
> Rather than drool about it, try taking an actual shot at doing so:  though 
> I'd normally consider talking with you to be a waste of my time, I'll make an 
> exception in this case.  Call it a grudge match, if you want:  I *really* 
> don't like the kind of incompetence that someone who behaves as you just did 
> represents and also consider it something in the nature of a civic duty to 
> expose if for what it is.
>
> ...
>
>   
>> I suggest getting a blog and ranting there, you have
>> no audience here.
>>     
>
> Another demonstrably incorrect statement, I'm afraid:  the contents of this 
> thread make it clear that some people here, despite their preconceptions, do 
> consider a detailed analysis of ZFS's relative strengths to be a fit subject 
> for discussion.  And since it's only human for them to resist changing those 
> preconceptions, it's hardly surprising that the discussion gets slightly 
> heated at times.
>
> Education frequently can only occur through confrontation:  existing biases 
> make it difficult for milder forms to get through.  I'd like to help people 
> here learn something, but I'm at least equally interested in learning things 
> myself - and since there are areas in which I consider ZFS's design to be 
> significantly sub-optimal, where better to test that opinion than here?
>
> Unfortunately, so far the discussion has largely bogged down in debate over 
> just how important ZFS's unique (save for WAFL) checksum protection 
> mechanisms may be, and has not been very productive given the reluctance of 
> many here to tackle that question quantitatively (though David eventually 
> started to do so) - so there's been very little opportunity for learning on 
> my part save for a few details about media-file internals.  I'm more 
> interested in discussing things like whether my suggested fix for RAID-Z's 
> poor parallel-small-access performance overlooked some real obstacle, or why 
> ZFS was presented as a highly-scalable file system when its largest files can 
> require up to 6 levels of indirect blocks (making performance for 
> random-access operations suck and causing snapshot data for updated large 
> files to balloon) and it offers no obvious extension path to clustered 
> operation (a single node - especially a single *commodity* node of the type 
> that ZFS otherwise favors - runs
  o
>  ut of steam in the PB range, or even lower for some workloads, and even 
> breaking control out into a separate metadata server doesn't get you that 
> much farther), or whether ZFS's apparently-centralized block-allocation 
> mechanisms can scale well (using preallocation to predistribute large chunks 
> that can be managed independently helps, but again doesn't get you beyond the 
> PB range at best), or the blind spot that some of the developers appear to 
> have about the importance of on-disk contiguity for streaming access 
> performance (128 KB chunks just don't cut it in terms of efficient disk 
> utilization in parallel environments unless they're grouped together), or its 
> trade-off of run-time performance and space use for performance when 
> accessing snapshots (I'm guessing that it was more faith in the virtue of 
> full-tree-path updating as compared with using a transaction log that 
> actually caused that decision, so perhaps that's the real subject for 
> discussion).
>
> Of course, given that ZFS is what it is, there's natural tendency just to 
> plow forward and not 'waste time' revisiting already-made decisions - so the 
> people best able to discuss them may not want to.  But you never know unless 
> you try.
>
> - bill
>  
>  
> This message posted from opensolaris.org
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>   


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