Linked by Thom Holwerda on Tue 24th Oct 2006 20:56 UTC
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Member since:
2005-07-06
#3, the integrity checking, is very important as it helps detect "silent" corruption happening on a disk drive, say from a flaky controller, and gives the system opportunities for correction, but minimally it provides notification. Effectively, ZFS is running and tracking checksums at the block level.
The more front facing benefit from an admin point of view is simply that the ZFS command line is REALLY simple and easy to use. It's well documented, and almost "intuitive".
To be fair, this is "syntactic sugar", and the IBM admin app (I forget the name not have touched AIX in over 10 years) is certainly easy to use from a "green screen", Curses style application, but from the command line it's not as clean and clear as the ZFS command line. And compared to the de facto VERITAS system that ZFS will most likely place in large scale use, the interface is simply night and day.
I'm really hoping that Apple is looking at ZFS VERY seriously, because I have great confidence that they can make an admin tool and leverage ZFS capabilities to push it to the next level of making it a consumer friendly file system. The "adding a stick of RAM" analogy is very apt to how disk pools are managed, and I think there's great value for consumers to be able to convert a 100G volume in to a contiguous 200G volume with simply slapping in a new hard drive.