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posted by martyb on Friday February 19 2016, @03:23AM   Printer-friendly
from the someday-coming-to-a-phone-near-you? dept.

For those Linux folks out there, imagine merging LVM2, dm-raid, and your file system of choice into an all powerful, enterprise ready, check-summed, redundant, containerized, soft raid, disk pool, ram hungry, demi-god file system. The FreeBSD Handbook is a good start to grep the basic capabilities and function of ZFS[*].

The Ars reports:

A new long-term support (LTS) version of Ubuntu is coming out in April, and Canonical just announced a major addition that will please anyone interested in file storage. Ubuntu 16.04 will include the ZFS filesystem module by default, and the OpenZFS-based implementation will get official support from Canonical.
...
ZFS is used primarily in cases where data integrity is important—it's designed not just to store data but to continually check on that data to make sure it hasn't been corrupted. The oversimplified version is that the filesystem generates a checksum for each block of data. That checksum is then saved in the pointer for that block, and the pointer itself is also checksummed. This process continues all the way up the filesystem tree to the root node, and when any data on the disk is accessed, its checksum is calculated again and compared against the stored checksum to make sure that the data hasn't been corrupted or changed. If you have mirrored storage, the filesystem can seamlessly and invisibly overwrite the corrupted data with correct data.

ZFS was available as a technology preview in Ubuntu 15.10, but the install method was a bit more cumbersome than just apt-get install zfsutils-linux. I for one am excited to see ZFS coming to Linux as it is a phenomenal solution for building NAS devices and for making incremental backups of a file system. Now I just wish Ubuntu would do something about the systemD bug.

[*] According to Wikipedia:

ZFS is a combined file system and logical volume manager designed by Sun Microsystems. The features of ZFS include protection against data corruption, support for high storage capacities, efficient data compression, integration of the concepts of filesystem and volume management, snapshots and copy-on-write clones, continuous integrity checking and automatic repair, RAID-Z and native NFSv4 ACLs.

ZFS was originally implemented as open-source software, licensed under the Common Development and Distribution License (CDDL). The ZFS name is registered as a trademark of Oracle Corporation.

OpenZFS is an umbrella project aimed at bringing together individuals and companies that use the ZFS file system and work on its improvements.


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  • (Score: 2) by rleigh on Friday February 19 2016, @07:51PM

    by rleigh (4887) on Friday February 19 2016, @07:51PM (#307048) Homepage

    I started out with ZFS on Linux, before moving the discs over into a new FreeBSD server and importing the pool. Easiest data migration I've ever done, particularly between operating systems. Like you I don't bother with dedup.

    While ZFS on Linux is certainly less mature than on FreeBSD, and lacks the nice integration you get there, my experience of it was that it's pretty solid. (I originally got into ZFS from work colleagues who had some pretty serious ZFS pools, all on Linux. They all swear by it and have been using it for several years.)

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