I got more info. I can run zpool history and this is what I get:

2008-05-23.00:29:40 zfs destroy tera/[EMAIL PROTECTED]
2008-05-23.00:29:47 [internal destroy_begin_sync txg:3890809] dataset = 152
2008-05-23.01:28:38 [internal destroy_begin_sync txg:3891101] dataset = 152
2008-05-23.07:01:36 zpool import -f tera
2008-05-23.07:01:40 [internal destroy_begin_sync txg:3891106] dataset = 152
2008-05-23.10:52:56 zpool import -f tera
2008-05-23.10:52:58 [internal destroy_begin_sync txg:3891112] dataset = 152
2008-05-23.12:17:49 [internal destroy_begin_sync txg:3891114] dataset = 152
2008-05-23.12:27:48 zpool import -f tera
2008-05-23.12:27:50 [internal destroy_begin_sync txg:3891120] dataset = 152
2008-05-23.13:03:07 [internal destroy_begin_sync txg:3891122] dataset = 152
2008-05-23.13:56:52 zpool import -f tera
2008-05-23.13:56:54 [internal destroy_begin_sync txg:3891128] dataset = 152

apparently, it starts destroying dataset #152, which is the parent snapshot of 
the clone I issued the command to destroy. Not sure how it works, but I ordered 
the deletion of the CLONE, not the snapshot (which I was going to destroy 
anyway). 

The question is still, why does it hang the machine? Why can't I access the 
filesystems? Isn't it supposed to import the zpool, mount the ZFSs and then do 
the destroy, in background?
 
 
This message posted from opensolaris.org
_______________________________________________
zfs-discuss mailing list
zfs-discuss@opensolaris.org
http://mail.opensolaris.org/mailman/listinfo/zfs-discuss

Reply via email to