Skip Navigation Links | |
Exit Print View | |
Oracle Solaris ZFS Administration Guide Oracle Solaris 11 Express 11/10 |
1. Oracle Solaris ZFS File System (Introduction)
ZFS Snapshot Differences (zfs diff)
ZFS Storage Pool Recovery and Performance Enhancements
Tuning ZFS Synchronous Behavior
ZFS ACL Interoperability Improvements
Splitting a Mirrored ZFS Storage Pool (zpool split)
Changes to the zpool list Command
ZFS Device Replacement Enhancements
ZFS ACL Pass Through Inheritance for Execute Permission
Using Cache Devices in Your ZFS Storage Pool
Rolling Back a Dataset Without Unmounting
Enhancements to the zfs send Command
ZFS Quotas and Reservations for File System Data Only
ZFS File System Properties for the Solaris CIFS Service
ZFS and File System Mirror Mounts
ZFS Command History Enhancements (zpool history)
Upgrading ZFS File Systems (zfs upgrade)
Setting Up Separate ZFS Log Devices
Creating Intermediate ZFS Datasets
Recursively Renaming ZFS Snapshots (zfs rename -r)
gzip Compression Is Available for ZFS
Storing Multiple Copies of ZFS User Data
ZFS and Solaris iSCSI Improvements
Sharing ZFS File System Enhancements
ZFS Command History (zpool history)
Setting Properties When Creating ZFS File Systems
Displaying All ZFS File System Information
Hot Spares for ZFS Storage Pool Devices
Replacing a ZFS File System With a ZFS Clone (zfs promote)
Upgrading ZFS Storage Pools (zpool upgrade)
Using ZFS to Clone Non-Global Zones and Other Enhancements
ZFS Backup and Restore Commands Are Renamed
Recovering Destroyed Storage Pools
ZFS Is Integrated With Fault Manager
File System Monitoring Tool (fsstat)
Checksums and Self-Healing Data
2. Getting Started With Oracle Solaris ZFS
3. Oracle Solaris ZFS and Traditional File System Differences
4. Managing Oracle Solaris ZFS Storage Pools
5. Managing ZFS Root Pool Components
6. Managing Oracle Solaris ZFS File Systems
7. Working With Oracle Solaris ZFS Snapshots and Clones
8. Using ACLs and Attributes to Protect Oracle Solaris ZFS Files
9. Oracle Solaris ZFS Delegated Administration
10. Oracle Solaris ZFS Advanced Topics
11. Oracle Solaris ZFS Troubleshooting and Pool Recovery
Each ZFS component, such as datasets and pools, must be named according to the following rules:
Each component can only contain alphanumeric characters in addition to the following four special characters:
Underscore (_)
Hyphen (-)
Colon (:)
Period (.)
Pool names must begin with a letter, except for the following restrictions:
The beginning sequence c[0-9] is not allowed.
The name log is reserved.
A name that begins with mirror, raidz, raidz1, raidz2, raidz3, or spare is not allowed because these names are reserved.
Pool names must not contain a percent sign (%).
Dataset names must begin with an alphanumeric character.
Dataset names must not contain a percent sign (%).
In addition, empty components are not allowed.