Sponsored Content
Operating Systems Solaris How to grow a zfs file system? Post 302993216 by jlliagre on Tuesday 7th of March 2017 05:58:09 PM
Old 03-07-2017
Quote:
Originally Posted by gull04
I can't really understand the logic of a single disk in a zpool, as there are no data replicas available that allow the benefits of zfs - you might as well use UFS at least you have more recovery tools.
A single disk pool is a poor practice, but unfortunately widespread when storage arrays are used. ZFS is still beneficial when using a single disk pool though.
  • There is double or triple redundancy in the metadata, that makes the file system resilient to moderate disk corruption.
  • You can also enable ditto blocks (copies) so data itself would recover from some disk blocks issues.
  • ZFS will immediately spot corrupted data or metadata while UFS will return corrupted data without notice and might panic the OS if metadata is corrupted.
  • Finally, telling you have more UFS recovering tools is questionable. With ZFS, you can recover from situations where UFS would be helpless.
This User Gave Thanks to jlliagre For This Post:
 

9 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

zfs file system

Hi, I try add a new file system: #zfs create dsk1/mqm it came back with: #cannot create 'dsk1/mqm': no such pool 'dsk1' what do I have to do? Kind regards Mehrdad (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: mehrdad68
2 Replies

2. AIX

Cannot grow jfs file system on AIX 5.2

Hello all, I'm trying to grow a file system by 500MB using SMIT on AIX 5.2 but I receive this error: "0516-404 allocp: This system cannot fulfill the allocation request. There are not enough free partitions or not enough physical volumes to keep strictness and satisfy allocation requests.... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: need2bageek
3 Replies

3. Solaris

How to grow my files System?

Dear Gurus of Unix. When I Put this command: # iostat -E cmdk0 Soft Errors: 0 Hard Errors: 0 Transport Errors: 0 Model: SAMSUNG SV4012H Revision: Serial No: 0540J1BTC53208 Size: 40.06GB <40060403712 bytes> Media Error: 0 Device Not Ready: 0 No Device: 0 Recoverable: 0 Illegal... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: andresguillen
6 Replies

4. Shell Programming and Scripting

ZFS file system - memory monitoring

I am working on a server where the 'root' user ZFS filesystem. Now when I do Top commands it says only 750M free .But when I count the actual memory utilized it comes only to 12 GB and the total size of the server is 32G. I think rest of the space is held up by ZFS file system. Is there a... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: prasperl
5 Replies

5. Solaris

increase SWAP on ZFS file system

Hi All, I am using this commands to dynamically increase ZFS swap space on Solaris my question is: 1- after i make these commands it will permanent or it will remove after restart 2- how to make it permanent # swap -l swapfile dev swaplo bloques libre /dev/zvol/dsk/rpool/swap... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: osmanux
4 Replies

6. Solaris

Patching on ZFS file-system

Hi, I have Solaris-10 (Update-7). This is having ZFS file-system and 10 sparse-root zones are there. I want to install Solaris-10 recommended patch cluster on it, but not sure, how to go ahead with procedure. I want to patch one side of the mirror and keep intact another side safe in case of... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: solaris_1977
6 Replies

7. Solaris

Grow / expand a ZFS volume

Hi, I need to expand a ZFS volume from 500GB to 800GB. I'd like to ask your help to confirm the following procedure: Can I do it on the fly without bothering the users working on this volume? Thank you in advance! (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: aixlover
6 Replies

8. Emergency UNIX and Linux Support

Not able to extend ZFS file system

Hi All, I have Solaris-10 configured with two non-global zones. All file-systems are mounted on global zone and data file-systems are mounted on non-global zone as lofs. I have added 4 luns of 100 GB each and still not able to extend a file-system. This is production server, so I can not... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: solaris_1977
5 Replies

9. Solaris

2540 volume expand and solaris zfs grow

Hello I hope everyone is having a good day! Situation: 2540 with 3.6TB of usable space volume A is 2.6TB volume B was 1TB Volume A is mounted via a single lun on a solaris server and is running out of space. Volume B was used on another server but is no longer, I deleted the volume in... (7 Replies)
Discussion started by: Metasin
7 Replies
ufs(7FS)																  ufs(7FS)

NAME
ufs - UFS file system SYNOPSIS
#include <sys/param.h> #include <sys/types.h> #include <sys/fs/ufs_fs.h> #include <sys/fs/ufs_inode.h> UFS is the default disk-based file system for the Solaris environment. The UFS file system is hierarchical, starting with its root direc- tory (/) and continuing downward through a number of directories. The root of a UFS file system is inode 2. A UFS file system's root con- tents replace the contents of the directory upon which it is mounted. Subsequent sections of this manpage provide details of the UFS file systems. State Flags (fs_state and fs_clean) UFS uses state flags to identify the state of the file system. fs_state is FSOKAY - fs_time. fs_time is the timestamp that indicates when the last system write occurred. fs_state is updated whenever fs_clean changes. Some fs_clean values are: FSCLEAN Indicates an undamaged, cleanly unmounted file system. FSACTIVE Indicates a mounted file system that has modified data in memory. A mounted file system with this state flag indi- cates that user data or metadata would be lost if power to the system is interrupted. FSSTABLE Indicates an idle mounted file system. A mounted file system with this state flag indicates that neither user data nor metadata would be lost if power to the system is interrupted. FSBAD Indicates that this file system contains inconsistent file system data. FSLOG Indicates that the file system has logging enabled. A file system with this flag set is either mounted or unmounted. If a file system has logging enabled, the only flags that it can have are FSLOG or FSBAD. A non-logging file system can have FSACTIVE, FSSTABLE, or FSCLEAN. It is not necessary to run the fsck command on unmounted file systems with a state of FSCLEAN, FSSTABLE, or FSLOG. mount(2) returns ENOSPC if an attempt is made to mount a UFS file system with a state of FSACTIVE for read/write access. As an additional safeguard, fs_clean should be trusted only if fs_state contains a value equal to FSOKAY - fs_time, where FSOKAY is a con- stant integer defined in the /usr/include/sys/fs/ufs_fs.h file. Otherwise, fs_clean is treated as though it contains the value of FSAC- TIVE. Extended Fundamental Types (EFT) Extended Fundamental Types (EFT) provide 32-bit user ID (UID), group ID (GID), and device numbers. If a UID or GID contains an extended value, the short variable (ic_suid, ic_sgid) contains the value 65535 and the corresponding UID or GID is in ic_uid or ic_gid. Because numbers for block and character devices are stored in the first direct block pointer of the inode (ic_db[0]) and the disk block addresses are already 32 bit values, no special encoding exists for device numbers (unlike UID or GID fields). Multiterabyte File System A multiterabyte file system enables creation of a UFS file system up to approximately 16 terabytes of usable space, minus approximately one percent overhead. A sparse file can have a logical size of one terabyte. However, the actual amount of data that can be stored in a file is approximately one percent less than one terabyte because of file system overhead. On-disk format changes for a multiterabyte UFS file system include: o The magic number in the superblock changes from FS_MAGIC to MTB_UFS_MAGIC. For more information, see the /usr/include/sys/fs/ufs_fs file. o The fs_logbno unit is a sector for UFS that is less than 1 terabyte in size and fragments for a multiterabyte UFS file system. UFS Logging UFS logging bundles the multiple metadata changes that comprise a complete UFS operation into a transaction. Sets of transactions are recorded in an on-disk log and are applied to the actual UFS file system's metadata. UFS logging provides two advantages: 1. A file system that is consistent with the transaction log eliminates the need to run fsck after a system crash or an unclean shutdown. 2. UFS logging often provides a significant performance improvement. This is because a file system with logging enabled converts multiple updates to the same data into single updates, thereby reducing the number of overhead disk operations. The UFS log is allocated from free blocks on the file system, and is sized at approximately 1 Mbyte per 1 Gbyte of file system, up to a maximum of 64 Mbytes. The log is continually flushed as it fills up. The log is also flushed when the file system is unmounted or as a result of a lockfs command. Mounting UFS File Systems You can mount a UFS file system in various ways using syntax similar to the following: 1. Use mount from the command line: # mount -F ufs /dev/dsk/c0t0d0s7 /export/home 2. Include an entry in the /etc/vfstab file to mount the file system at boot time: /dev/dsk/c0t0d0s7 /dev/rdsk/c0t0d0s7 /export/home ufs 2 yes - For more information on mounting UFS file systems, see mount_ufs(1M). See attributes(5) for a description of the following attributes: +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ | ATTRIBUTE TYPE | ATTRIBUTE VALUE | +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ |Interface Stability |Unstable | +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ df(1M), fsck(1M), fsck_ufs(1M), fstyp(1M), mkfs_ufs(1M), newfs(1M), ufsdump(1M), ufsrestore(1M), tunefs(1M), mount(2), attributes(5) NOTES
For information about internal UFS structures, see newfs(1M) and mkfs_ufs(1M). For information about the ufsdump and ufsrestore commands, see ufsdump(1M), ufsrestore(1M), and /usr/include/protocols/dumprestore.h. If you experience difficulty in allocating space on the ufs filesystem, if may be due to framentation. Fragmentation can occur when you do not have sufficient free blocks to satisfy an allocation request even though df(1M) indicates that enough free space is available. (This may occur because df only uses the available fragment count to calculate available space, but the file system requires contiguous sets of fragments for most allocations). If you suspect that you have exhausted contiguous fragments on your file system, you can use the fstyp(1M) utility with the -v option. In the fstyp output, look at the nbfree (number of blocks free) and nffree (number of frag- ments free) fields. On unmounted filesystems, you can use fsck(1M) and observe the last line of output, which reports, among other items, the number of fragments and the degree of fragmentation. To correct a fragmentation problem, run ufsdump(1M) and ufsrestore(1M) on the ufs filesystem. 25 Jun 2003 ufs(7FS)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 03:24 AM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy