01-23-2018
Can you share logs regrading the sentence 'Solaris gets confused' ?
Something must be written in logs, feel free to paste them here if possible.
As for Linux zfs i have no experience, but the common denominator zpool and zfs version should be able to coexist across various systems if configured properly.
Since you are able to use the filesystem on both operating system, we shall assume it is.
Lets say you have a situation :
/home/user -> this is a regular part of rpool on solaris
/home/user -> this is a regular part of root volume group on linux
A third disk is introduced and zpool is created in <input operating system on which you have created the zpool>.
For the sake of argument the mountpoint for that zpool is mounted on /personal_files and it has directory structure behind (Documents, vbox etc.)
The mountpoint is the same on both operating systems.
A soft link is created in linux /home/user pointing to /personal_files/Documents
A soft link is created in Solaris /home/user pointing to /personal_files/Documents
Is the above correct ?
In that case, one should not have any issues regarding mounting the home directory, regardless of soft links pointing to data disk.
No ?
Please provide the exact layout and configuration details as possible.
Including commands used for creation of zpool (operating system where it was initially created and version and zfs properties).
Regards
Peasant.
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LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
zfs-fuse
ZFS-FUSE(8) [FIXME: manual] ZFS-FUSE(8)
NAME
zfs-fuse - ZFS filesystem daemon
SYNOPSIS
zfs-fuse [--pidfile filename] [--no-daemon] [--no-kstat-mount] [--disable-block-cache] [--disable-page-cache] [--fuse-attr-timeout SECONDS]
[--fuse-entry-timeout SECONDS] [--log-uberblocks] [--max-arc-size MB] [--fuse-mount-options OPT,OPT,OPT...]
[--min-uberblock-txg MIN] [--stack-size=size] [--enable-xattr] [--help]
DESCRIPTION
This manual page documents briefly the zfs-fuse command.
zfs-fuse is a daemon which provides support for the ZFS filesystem, via fuse. Ordinarily this daemon will be invoked from system boot
scripts.
OPTIONS
This program follows the usual GNU command line syntax, with long options starting with two dashes (`-'). A summary of options is included
below. For a complete description, see the Info files.
-h --help
Show summary of options.
-p filename --pidfile filename
Write the daemon's PID to filename after daemonizing. Ignored if --no-daemon is passed. filename should be a fully-qualified path.
-n --no-daemon
Stay in foreground, don't daemonize.
--no-kstat-mount
Do not mount kstats in /zfs-kstat
--disable-block-cache
Enable direct I/O for disk operations. Completely disables caching reads and writes in the kernel block cache. Breaks mmap() in ZFS
datasets too.
--disable-page-cache
Disable the page cache for files residing within ZFS filesystems. Not recommended as it slows down I/O operations considerably.
-a SECONDS --fuse-attr-timeout SECONDS
Sets timeout for caching FUSE attributes in kernel. Defaults to 0.0. Higher values give a 40% performance boost.
-e SECONDS --fuse-entry-timeout SECONDS
Sets timeout for caching FUSE entries in kernel. Defaults to 0.0. Higher values give a 10000% performance boost but cause file
permission checking security issues.
--log-uberblocks
Logs uberblocks of any mounted filesystem to syslog
-m MB --max-arc-size MB
Forces the maximum ARC size (in megabytes). Range: 16 to 16384.
-o OPT... --fuse-mount-options OPT,OPT,OPT...
Sets FUSE mount options for all filesystems. Format: comma-separated string of characters.
-u MIN --min-uberblock-txg MIN
Skips uberblocks with a TXG < MIN when mounting any fs
-v MB --vdev-cache-size MB
adjust the size of the vdev cache. Default : 10
--zfs-prefetch-disable
Disable the high level prefetch cache in zfs. This thing can eat up to 150 Mb of ram, maybe more
--stack-size=size
Limit the stack size of threads (in kb). default : no limit (8 Mb for linux)
-x --enable-xattr
Enable support for extended attributes. Not generally recommended because it currently has a significant performance penalty for many
small IOPS
-h --help
Show this usage summary.
REMARKS ON PRECEDENCE
Note that the parameters passed on the command line take precedence over those supplied through /etc/zfs/zfsrc.
BUGS
/CAVEATS
The path to the configuration file (/etc/zfs/zfsrc) cannot at this time be configured.
Most existing packages suggest settings can be set at the top of their init script. These get frequently overridden by a (distribution
specific) /etc/default/zfs-fuse file, if it exists. Be sure to look at these places if you want your changes to options to take effect.
The /etc/zfs/zfsrc is going to be the recommended approach in the future. So, packagers, please refrain from passing commandline parameters
within the initscript (except for --pid-file).
SEE ALSO
zfs (8), zpool (8), zdb(8), zstreamdump(8), /etc/zfs/zfsrc
AUTHOR
This manual page was written by Bryan Donlan bdonlan@gmail.com for the Debian(TM) system (but may be used by others). Permission is granted
to copy, distribute and/or modify this document under the terms of the GNU General Public License, Version 2 any later version published by
the Free Software Foundation, or the Common Development and Distribution License.
Revised by Seth Heeren zfs-fuse@sehe.nl
On Debian systems, the complete text of the GNU General Public License can be found in /usr/share/common-licenses/GPL. The text of the
Common Development and Distribution Licence may be found at /usr/share/doc/zfs-fuse/copyright
COPYRIGHT
Copyright (C) 2010 Bryan Donlan
[FIXME: source] 2010-06-09 ZFS-FUSE(8)