Greg Troxel <g...@lexort.com> writes: [snip]
> [I don't really know what you mean by legacy (other than non-zfs, but > you didn't say that, so perhaps you mean something different).] [snip] I am only going to speak to the use of "legacy" in this conversation. What is referred to here is a specific ZFS idea and should not be confused with any sort of global notion. Specifically, ZFS, by default and in common use, does not use anything like a /etc/fstab or /etc/vfstab to specify where the filesets get mounted. It also does not usually use the usual mount command either to mount them, although that would work in Solaris if I remember correctly (at least in some cases). What happens is that the mount point is specified in the fileset meta data and "zfs mount ...." takes care of getting it mounted. If you wanted to use /etc/fstab or /etc/vfstab with ZFS you need to mark the mountpoint in the fileset as being legacy, then you could fill in your /etc/... files as you wanted. This, of course, strongly suggests that Sun was going to make all of the other filesystems except ZFS second class, but Sun fell apart before that really progressed to anything final and Oracle never really ran to that conclusion either. No one is at all suggesting that any filesystem become second class in the NetBSD realization of ZFS. So the term legacy when speaking of ZFS is used to refer to a filesystem that uses whatever /etc/... files you use and uses the usual mount command. -- Brad Spencer - b...@anduin.eldar.org - KC8VKS - http://anduin.eldar.org