• Peasley@lemmy.world
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        3 months ago

        Not recommended for single-disk root partitions. This is a mistake I’ve made myself. Recovery tools are non-existant on ZFS so non-parity setups are inherently risky. If you have root setup on at least raidz1 with at least 2 disks you are fine.

        • Avid Amoeba@lemmy.ca
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          3 months ago

          Personally I wouldn’t consider recovery as an option at all because it could easily be unavailable because the SSD failed. Instead, I tend to add a mirror drive and/or keep frequent backups where that’s not possible. So from that perspective ZFS is equivalent to Ext4, which I currently use. I’d prefer ZFS over it for it’s data verification, snapshotting and datasets features.

          • Peasley@lemmy.world
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            3 months ago

            I’ve successfully recovered data from ext4 on a broken drive on one occasion. I agree it would have been better to have backups so lesson learned I suppose. Still if I’d been on ZFS root with no mirror I’d have been even more SOL

    • CosmicTurtle0@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      3 months ago

      I love ZFS but support for it on Ubuntu seems haphazard. It works fine for non-root drives.

      I’ve tried running it as my root partition and just gave up after it fucked up my bpool dataset too many times.

        • CosmicTurtle0@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          3 months ago

          Yup. It booted fine but after a few reboots, bpool somehow got corrupted and refused to boot. It happened repeatedly after several reinstalls.

          • qprimed@lemmy.ml
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            3 months ago

            ZFS hits memory hard and sometimes can bring out latent deficiencies in that hardware. on non-optimal hardware its a bit of a hardware torture test in its own right.

            having said that, EXT4 and XFS are wonderful unless you need zfs/btrfs.