We created – only on bpool – a selection of features to ensure that grub will be able to read and boot from any ZFS filesystem or snapshot datasets. □ Pool enhancementsįor more technical savy users, you will be delighted to know that we upgraded the bpool version to 5000 (previously, it was at version 28). Unless you want to understand a little more about what this will bring to you in addition to all the ZFS robustness, checksuming, decompression and such, this is where you can stop! The system will work silently for you and you can forget about it. Thanks to this, we are committed to deliver the best OpenZFS on Linux experience to our audience by continuing to fix any important issues that arise, and backporting any critical fixes from newer releases.Īnd that’s it! For your daily driver, you don’t need to do anything more. ZSys and other components (for instance ZFS bindings) have been updated to work with the new libzfs version. We also backported in Ubuntu 20.04 LTS other fixes in our kernel from the incoming 0.8.4 (and OpenZFS 2.0) release, like encryption performance enhancements. As usual, those releases ( 0.8.2 and 0.8.3) bring a lot of improvements and fixes, (note though that we backported some fixes in Ubuntu 19.10 from 0.8.2 into our package to fix some critical issues for our users). We updated from 19.10 to 20.04 LTS OpenZFS to its latest and greatest available release (0.8.3). We hope to be able to drop this experimental support in the coming cycle, and backport to a 20.04.x release. With OpenZFS on Ubuntu 20.04 LTS, we are building the first steps of getting the Ubuntu bulletproof desktop. The installer highlights this in the corresponding screen. The first thing to note is that our ZFS support with ZSys is still experimental. Without further ado, let’s dive into this! ZFS & Ubuntu 20.04 LTS We will give you tips on how to tweak it at your convenience if you are a ZFS sysadmin expert, while still keeping ZSys advanced capabilities compatible. Finally, for the more tech savy, we deep dive into how we use ZFS, store properties and understand how the puzzle fits together. We then look at what ZSys, our dedicated helper for ZFS systems, can do for you and how you can interact with it. Here we cover what’s new compared to 19.10 in term of installation and general features. I strongly suggest you read the 2 blog posts, linked above, as introductions to this blog series we are starting. As explained, having a ZFS on root option on our desktop was only a first step in what we want to achieve by adopting this combined file system and logical volume manager. In 19.10, we introduced experimental support on the desktop. Ubuntu has supported ZFS as an option for some time.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |