zfs scrub enable by default
John Long
codeblue at inbox.lv
Wed Aug 5 15:22:05 UTC 2020
On 05/08/2020 13:15, Bob Friesenhahn wrote:
> On Tue, 4 Aug 2020, Karl Denninger wrote:
>
>> Let me give you two allegedly "degenerate" cases that are actually not
>> degenerate at all.
>>
>> 1. A laptop or workstation. It is backed up. It uses ZFS because
>> it's faster, and I can establish a filesystem for some project very
>> easily and quickly, it's segregated, I can work on it and destroy it
>> trivially when done. I can set quotas on that, etc. If I want to
>> move its mountpoint, I can trivially do so. And so on. Note that here
>> there is no redundancy at all; no raidZx, no mirroring, etc. I'm
>> merely using it for convenience.
>
> Did you remember to set copies=2 or copies=3 for zfs filesystems where
> you hope not to experience data loss? It needs to be set as soon as
> possible since it only applies to new files. This is a way to get more
> media redundancy, although the whole drive may fail.
Does copies=n actually create n-1 additional physical copies or is it
copy-on-write, or something else yet?
/jl
More information about the freebsd-fs
mailing list