J'ai installé opensolaris v27, pour l'instant solaris doit toujours être installé sur une partition UFS, dommage ...

Le 16 nov. 05 à 22:55, Alexandre Chartre - Solaris Sustaining a écrit :


Le fait que ce soit OpenSolaris indique que les sources sont disponibles,
et ZFS sera bien sur dans le prochain Solaris Express.

alex.

Gérard Henry wrote:
bonsoir,
vous avez vu passer cette info? pourquoi opensolaris et pas express?
Eric Schrock wrote:
 > Welcome to the ZFS Community!
 >
> Today, build 27 of OpenSolaris was released to the community. Included in this > release is ZFS, Sun's next generation filesystem. We are proud to announce the > creation of the ZFS community to discuss and develop ZFS for the future. You
 > can find the community at:
 >
 >         http://www.opensolaris.org/os/community/zfs
 >
 > Be sure to look for blogs relating to ZFS at:
 >
 >         http://blogs.sun.com
 >
 > As well as an introductory screencast produced by Dan Price:
 >
 >         http://www.opensolaris.org/os/community/zfs/demos/basics/
 >
> For the developers out there, you can find an overview of the source code at:
 >
 >         http://www.opensolaris.org/os/community/zfs/source/
 >
> Many thanks to the ZFS and OpenSolaris teams for making this a reality.
 >
 >
 > So what is ZFS?
 >
> ZFS is a new kind of filesystem that provides simple administration, > transactional semantics, end-to-end data integrity, and immense scalability. ZFS > is not an incremental improvement to existing technology; it is a fundamentally > new approach to data management. We've blown away 20 years of obsolete > assumptions, eliminated complexity at the source, and created a storage system
 > that's actually a pleasure to use.
 >
> ZFS presents a pooled storage model that completely eliminates the concept of > volumes and the associated problems of partitions, provisioning, wasted > bandwidth and stranded storage. Thousands of filesystems can draw from a common > storage pool, each one consuming only as much space as it actually needs.
 >
> All operations are copy-on-write transactions, so the on-disk state is always > valid. There is no need to fsck(1M) a ZFS filesystem, ever. Every block is > checksummed to prevent silent data corruption, and the data is self-healing in
 > replicated (mirrored or RAID) configurations.
 >
> ZFS provides unlimited constant-time snapshots and clones. A snapshot is a > read-only point-in-time copy of a filesystem, while a clone is a writable copy > of a snapshot. Clones provide an extremely space-efficient way to store many > copies of mostly-shared data such as workspaces, software installations, and
 > diskless clients.
 >
> ZFS administration is both simple and powerful. The tools are designed from the > ground up to eliminate all the traditional headaches relating to managing > filesystems. Storage can be added, disks replaced, and data scrubbed with > straightforward commands. Filesystems can be created instantaneously, snapshots > and clones taken, native backups made, and a simplified property mechanism
 > allows for setting of quotas, reservations, compression, and more.
 >
 >
 > Give it a spin, and let us know what you think!
 >
 > - The ZFS Team
gerard
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_______________________________________________
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Damien
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