Try zfs destroy -R poolname/filesystem

Read the man pages first to ensure this is what you want to do in your
situation.  The -r option might work for you as well.

-- 
Scott LeFevre
317-696-1010 

On Thu, 2014-08-07 at 12:46 -0700, Paul B. Henson wrote:

> I was wondering if anybody knew of a better way to delete a file system that
> might have snapshots with holds other than enumerating all of the snapshots
> of the file system, checking them for holds, and explicitly releasing them?
> I was hoping that -f would do the trick, but that still fails if a snapshot
> exists with a hold on it.
> 
> Thanks.
> 
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