So, does anybody have an approach to recovering this filesystem?
Is there a way to relabel the drives so that ZFS will recognize them,
without losing the data?
Thanks,
Lee
On Jul 5, 2008, at 1:24 PM, Lee Fyock wrote:
Hi--
Here's the scoop, in probably too much detail:
I'm a sucker
Hi--
Here's the scoop, in probably too much detail:
I'm a sucker for new filesystems and new tech in general. For you old-
time Mac people, I installed Sequoia when it was first seeded, and had
to reformat my drive several times as it grew to the final release. I
flipped the journaled flag
Thanks, Chad.
There's some debate in the Mac community about what the phrase the
file system in Mac OS X means. Does that mean that machines that
ship with Leopard will run on ZFS discs by default? Will ZFS be the
default file system when initializing a new drive?
IMHO, that seems
Cindy,
Thanks so much for the response -- this is the first one that I
consider an actual answer. :-)
I'm still unclear on exactly what I end up with. I apologize in
advance for my ignorance -- the ZFS admin guide assumes knowledge
that I don't yet have.
I assume that disk4 is a hot
Hi--
I'm looking forward to using zfs on my Mac at some point. My desktop
server (a dual-1.25GHz G4) has a motley collection of discs that has
accreted over the years: internal EIDE 320GB (boot drive), internal
250, 200 and 160 GB drives, and an external USB 2.0 600 GB drive.
My guess is
, please ... a PCI-
Express
based version of the SuperMicro AOC-SAT2-MV8 8-port Marvell based disk
controller card. Sun ... are you listening?
- mike
On 5/4/07, Al Hopper [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Fri, 4 May 2007, Lee Fyock wrote:
Hi--
I'm looking forward to using zfs on my Mac at some