Is there a way to find out if a dataset has children or not using zfs
properties or other scriptable method?
I am looking for a more efficient way to delete datasets after they are
finished being used. Right now I use custom property to set delete=1 on a
dataset, and then I have a script that
On 27/09/2010 18:14, Geoff Nordli wrote:
Is there a way to find out if a dataset has children or not using zfs
properties or other scriptable method?
I am looking for a more efficient way to delete datasets after they are
finished being used. Right now I use custom property to set delete=1
From: Darren J Moffat
Sent: Monday, September 27, 2010 11:03 AM
On 27/09/2010 18:14, Geoff Nordli wrote:
Is there a way to find out if a dataset has children or not using zfs
properties or other scriptable method?
I am looking for a more efficient way to delete datasets after they
are
On Sep 27, 2010, at 11:54 AM, Geoff Nordli wrote:
Are there any properties I can set on the clone side?
Each clone records its origin snapshot in the origin property.
$ zfs get origin syspool/rootfs-nmu-001
From: Richard Elling
Sent: Monday, September 27, 2010 1:01 PM
On Sep 27, 2010, at 11:54 AM, Geoff Nordli wrote:
Are there any properties I can set on the clone side?
Each clone records its origin snapshot in the origin property.
$ zfs get origin syspool/rootfs-nmu-001
NAME