Managing Devices in Oracle® Solaris 11.2

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Updated: July 2014
 
 

About ZFS Disk Setup on Oracle Solaris Systems

You can use any disk on which to set up a ZFS file system. However, a ZFS file system is not directly mapped to a disk or a disk slice. You must create a ZFS storage pool before creating a ZFS file system. For more information about ZFS storage pools, see Chapter 3, Managing Oracle Solaris ZFS Storage Pools, in Managing ZFS File Systems in Oracle Solaris 11.2 .


Note -  You must properly configure your system disks before you can set up storage pools. For instructions on disk configuration, see Configuring Disks.

A root pool contains the root file system that is used to boot Oracle Solaris. A disk that is used in a non-root pool usually contains user or data files. You can attach additional disks to a root pool or a non-root pool for increased disk space.

To reduce system down time due to hardware failures, create a redundant root pool. Without a redundant root pool, if a root pool disk becomes damaged, the system might not boot. For redundant root pool configurations, Oracle Solaris supports only a mirrored root pool. In a mirrored root pool, you can add, replace, or detach disks to manage a pool's size.

    To recover from a damaged root pool disk, choose one of the following:

  • Reinstall the entire Oracle Solaris OS.

  • Replace the root pool disk and restore your file systems from snapshots or from a backup medium.

You can replace a disk in a redundant pool provided that enough redundancy exists among the other devices. In a non-redundant pool, you can replace a disk only if all of the devices are in the ONLINE status.