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shuman wrote:Have you tried with a throw away thumb drive or something? I've been thinking about trying the same thing on ZFSonLinux.
locationcold wrote:You can import pool from ZFSonLinux if it was created without feature flags support (-o version=28).
And you can import Zevo pool with ZFSonLinux, just don't upgrade it after.
I believe same will happen with FreeBSD.
ghaskins wrote:I inadvertently confirmed that ZoL v28 imports into Zevo without issue, so I dont see any issues going the other way assuming both sides support the underlying zpool version you happen to have (e.g. 28 -> 28, or 5000 -> 5000). A little caution would go a long way, though. If feasible, zfs-send your data to a secure backup location before trying
monkeyfoahead wrote:locationcold wrote:You can import pool from ZFSonLinux if it was created without feature flags support (-o version=28).
And you can import Zevo pool with ZFSonLinux, just don't upgrade it after.
I believe same will happen with FreeBSD.
This is excellent news, if it can be confirmed for true. What do you mean do not upgrade it? Are the versions not the same between Zevo and FreeBSD?
ilovezfs wrote:monkeyfoahead wrote:locationcold wrote:You can import pool from ZFSonLinux if it was created without feature flags support (-o version=28).
And you can import Zevo pool with ZFSonLinux, just don't upgrade it after.
I believe same will happen with FreeBSD.
This is excellent news, if it can be confirmed for true. What do you mean do not upgrade it? Are the versions not the same between Zevo and FreeBSD?
ZEVO and FreeBSD 9 both use pool version 28. ZFS on Linux uses pool version 5000.
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