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Date:      Wed, 2 Sep 2009 17:44:45 +1000
From:      Emil Mikulic <emikulic@gmail.com>
To:        Mark Stapper <stark@mapper.nl>
Cc:        Maciej Jan Broniarz <gausus@gausus.net>, freebsd-stable@freebsd.org, Miroslav Lachman <000.fbsd@quip.cz>, Thomas Backman <serenity@exscape.org>
Subject:   Re: zfs on gmirror slice
Message-ID:  <20090902074445.GA13588@dmr.ath.cx>
In-Reply-To: <4A9E1CB5.6030906@mapper.nl>
References:  <a7454e2f0909010704g2fb27216hacb3ffd2cae5594c@mail.gmail.com> <061541E3-F301-46C4-8ECB-5B05854F0EAA@exscape.org> <a7454e2f0909010904s224be2ectdd18eb887f4c1311@mail.gmail.com> <4A9D558A.9070609@quip.cz> <4A9E1CB5.6030906@mapper.nl>

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On Wed, Sep 02, 2009 at 09:20:21AM +0200, Mark Stapper wrote:
> updating a zfs filesystem which you are running from is next to
> impossible.

[citation needed]  :)

> So, i would recommend setting up gmirror to mirror your whole disks,
> install the base system(boot and "world") on a small UFS slice, and use
> the rest of the disc as zfs slice.

As Thomas Backman pointed out, this means you won't get self-healing.

I don't know if a ZFS mirror performs smarter disk access scheduling
than gmirror.  Someone oughta measure.  ;)

I recommend you (Maciej) do what Freddie Cash said: slice your disks
into two pieces each - a gmirror'd UFS root, and the rest for ZFS.
(or work out how to zfsboot)

--Emil



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