![]() ![]() ![]() If anyone knows how to do it, please comment or post it as an answer. What I am still missing is the nautilus integration for mount/unmount icon. It will complain: cannot import 'zfs-pool-WD14TB': pool was previously in use from another systemīut using -f it will work: sudo zpool import -f zfs-pool-WD14TB In case you did a fresh install you have to import the pool again. So after reboot I use: sudo zpool import zfs-pool-WD14TBĪt least in 20.04.RC1 the automount problem is gone. I have not managed so far to have the pool to automount by default. To maintain compatibility with legacy systems many. I am new to ZFS and posted what worked for me so far. Advanced Format (AF) is a new disk format which natively uses a 4,096 byte, instead of 512 byte, sector size. ![]() Then you can specify a mount point and a dataset: sudo zfs create -o mountpoint=/mnt/WD14TB zfs-pool-WD14TB/fs1Ĭhange mountpoint and dataset name to whatever you want.Īt last change owner so that you can copy and write files: sudo chown -R youruser:yourgroup /mnt/WD14TB After that you need to create a new pool: sudo zpool create zfs-pool-WD14TB /dev/disk/by-id/usb-WD_Elements_25A3_XXX-0:0Ĭhange zfs-pool-WD14TB to a name that make sense to you and use your actual disk id. First you need to know the id of the disk, so go to /dev/disk/by-id/ and get that. Originally when the same disk block was accessed from different clones it was cached multiple times (one for each clone accessing the block) in case a clone planned to modify the block. I will post the way I did it in case someone is interested. OpenZFS caches disk blocks in-memory in the adaptive replacement cache (ARC). ![]()
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