Hi Patrick,
Here's a pointer to the volume section in the ZFS admin guide:
http://docsview.sfbay/app/docs/doc/817-2271/6mhupg6gl?a=view
I welcome any comments--
Cindy
Patrick Petit wrote:
Eric Schrock wrote:
On Tue, Aug 01, 2006 at 01:10:44PM +0200, Patrick Petit wrote:
Hi There,
I looked at the ZFS admin guide in attempt to find a way to leverage
ZFS capabilities (storage pool, mirroring, dynamic stripping, etc.)
for Xen domU file systems that are not ZFS. Couldn't find an answer
whether ZFS could be used only as a "regular" volume manager to
create logical volumes for UFS or even a Linux ext2fs, with ideally,
the ability to create snapshots and clones...
You can create a zvol, which is a ZFS pseudo-device:
That's great ! Is this documented in the admin guide? I haven't seen it.
# zfs create -V 50G pool/myvol
This will create a 50G volume at '/dev/zvol/dsk/pool/myvol'. You can
take advantage of standard ZFS features, including compression,
snapshots, clones, etc. Of course be careful snapshotting live volumes,
you may catch the filesystem in an inconsistent state and end up unhappy
if you rollback, clone, etc.
Sure, I understand that.
Also, what can we expect, performance wise, from a file-backed
logical block device created on ZFS? Generally, performance is bad
due to the beneath file system overhead in comparison to a physical
block device. Would ZFS perform good enough in this configuration?
Do you mean a pool created from files, or a zvol as described above?
I meant the former.
Creating pools from files is definitely not a good idea if you
careabout performance. You'll be going through two layers of
filesystems,with all the added overhead of the standard POSIX
interface. If you mean the latter, you should get good performance,
though it will depend
on your workload. The volume talks directly to the DMU (data management
unit), bypassing the POSIX layer. You can even tune the volume block
size (with -b) to your workload - large streaming reads/writes can
benefit from a larger blocksize, depending on whether the filesystem
above can really take advantage of it.
Hope that helps,
Yes it does completely. Thank you.
- Patrick
- Eric
--
Eric Schrock, Solaris Kernel Development
http://blogs.sun.com/eschrock
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