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1'\" t
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21.\"
22.\"
058ac9ba 23.\" Copyright (c) 2009 Sun Microsystems, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
5990da81 24.\" Copyright 2011 Joshua M. Clulow <josh@sysmgr.org>
db49968e 25.\" Copyright (c) 2012 by Delphix. All rights reserved.
37abac6d 26.\" Copyright (c) 2012, Joyent, Inc. All rights reserved.
5990da81 27.\" Copyright 2012 Nexenta Systems, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
9759c60f 28.\" Copyright (c) 2013 by Saso Kiselkov. All rights reserved.
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29.\"
30.TH zfs 8 "Jan 10, 2013" "ZFS pool 28, filesystem 5" "System Administration Commands"
058ac9ba
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31.SH NAME
32zfs \- configures ZFS file systems
33.SH SYNOPSIS
34.LP
35.nf
36\fBzfs\fR [\fB-?\fR]
37.fi
38
39.LP
40.nf
41\fBzfs\fR \fBcreate\fR [\fB-p\fR] [\fB-o\fR \fIproperty\fR=\fIvalue\fR] ... \fIfilesystem\fR
42.fi
43
44.LP
45.nf
46\fBzfs\fR \fBcreate\fR [\fB-ps\fR] [\fB-b\fR \fIblocksize\fR] [\fB-o\fR \fIproperty\fR=\fIvalue\fR] ... \fB-V\fR \fIsize\fR \fIvolume\fR
47.fi
48
49.LP
50.nf
330d06f9 51\fBzfs\fR \fBdestroy\fR [\fB-fnpRrv\fR] \fIfilesystem\fR|\fIvolume\fR
058ac9ba
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52.fi
53
54.LP
55.nf
330d06f9 56\fBzfs\fR \fBdestroy\fR [\fB-dnpRrv\fR] \fIfilesystem\fR|\fIvolume\fR@\fIsnap\fR[%\fIsnap\fR][,...]
058ac9ba
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57.fi
58
59.LP
60.nf
6f1ffb06
MA
61\fBzfs\fR \fBsnapshot | snap\fR [\fB-r\fR] [\fB-o\fR \fIproperty\fR=\fIvalue\fR] ...
62 \fIfilesystem@snapname\fR|\fIvolume@snapname\fR ...
058ac9ba
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63.fi
64
65.LP
66.nf
67\fBzfs\fR \fBrollback\fR [\fB-rRf\fR] \fIsnapshot\fR
68.fi
69
70.LP
71.nf
72\fBzfs\fR \fBclone\fR [\fB-p\fR] [\fB-o\fR \fIproperty\fR=\fIvalue\fR] ... \fIsnapshot\fR \fIfilesystem\fR|\fIvolume\fR
73.fi
74
75.LP
76.nf
77\fBzfs\fR \fBpromote\fR \fIclone-filesystem\fR
78.fi
79
80.LP
81.nf
db49968e 82\fBzfs\fR \fBrename\fR [\fB-f\fR] \fIfilesystem\fR|\fIvolume\fR|\fIsnapshot\fR
058ac9ba
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83 \fIfilesystem\fR|\fIvolume\fR|\fIsnapshot\fR
84.fi
85
86.LP
87.nf
db49968e 88\fBzfs\fR \fBrename\fR [\fB-fp\fR] \fIfilesystem\fR|\fIvolume\fR \fIfilesystem\fR|\fIvolume\fR
058ac9ba
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89.fi
90
91.LP
92.nf
93\fBzfs\fR \fBrename\fR \fB-r\fR \fIsnapshot\fR \fIsnapshot\fR
94.fi
95
96.LP
97.nf
98\fBzfs\fR \fBlist\fR [\fB-r\fR|\fB-d\fR \fIdepth\fR][\fB-H\fR][\fB-o\fR \fIproperty\fR[,...]] [\fB-t\fR \fItype\fR[,...]]
157c9b69 99 [\fB-s\fR \fIproperty\fR] ... [\fB-S\fR \fIproperty\fR] ... [\fIfilesystem\fR|\fIvolume\fR|\fIsnapshot\fR] ...
058ac9ba
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100.fi
101
102.LP
103.nf
104\fBzfs\fR \fBset\fR \fIproperty\fR=\fIvalue\fR \fIfilesystem\fR|\fIvolume\fR|\fIsnapshot\fR ...
105.fi
106
107.LP
108.nf
e346ec25
AS
109\fBzfs\fR \fBget\fR [\fB-r\fR|\fB-d\fR \fIdepth\fR][\fB-Hp\fR][\fB-o\fR \fIfield\fR[,...]] [\fB-t\fR \fItype\fR[,...]]
110 [\fB-s\fR \fIsource\fR[,...]] "\fIall\fR" | \fIproperty\fR[,...] \fIfilesystem\fR|\fIvolume\fR|\fIsnapshot\fR ...
058ac9ba
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111.fi
112
113.LP
114.nf
115\fBzfs\fR \fBinherit\fR [\fB-r\fR] \fIproperty\fR \fIfilesystem\fR|\fIvolume|snapshot\fR ...
116.fi
117
118.LP
119.nf
120\fBzfs\fR \fBupgrade\fR [\fB-v\fR]
121.fi
122
123.LP
124.nf
125\fBzfs\fR \fBupgrade\fR [\fB-r\fR] [\fB-V\fR \fIversion\fR] \fB-a\fR | \fIfilesystem\fR
126.fi
127
128.LP
129.nf
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130\fBzfs\fR \fBuserspace\fR [\fB-Hinp\fR] [\fB-o\fR \fIfield\fR[,...]] [\fB-s\fR \fIfield\fR] ...
131 [\fB-S\fR \fIfield\fR] ... [\fB-t\fR \fItype\fR[,...]] \fIfilesystem\fR|\fIsnapshot\fR
058ac9ba
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132.fi
133
134.LP
135.nf
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136\fBzfs\fR \fBgroupspace\fR [\fB-Hinp\fR] [\fB-o\fR \fIfield\fR[,...]] [\fB-s\fR \fIfield\fR] ...
137 [\fB-S\fR \fIfield\fR] ... [\fB-t\fR \fItype\fR[,...]] \fIfilesystem\fR|\fIsnapshot\fR
058ac9ba
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138.fi
139
140.LP
141.nf
142\fBzfs\fR \fBmount\fR
143.fi
144
145.LP
146.nf
147\fBzfs\fR \fBmount\fR [\fB-vO\fR] [\fB-o \fIoptions\fR\fR] \fB-a\fR | \fIfilesystem\fR
148.fi
149
150.LP
151.nf
10b75496 152\fBzfs\fR \fBunmount | umount\fR [\fB-f\fR] \fB-a\fR | \fIfilesystem\fR|\fImountpoint\fR
058ac9ba
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153.fi
154
155.LP
156.nf
157\fBzfs\fR \fBshare\fR \fB-a\fR | \fIfilesystem\fR
158.fi
159
160.LP
161.nf
162\fBzfs\fR \fBunshare\fR \fB-a\fR \fIfilesystem\fR|\fImountpoint\fR
163.fi
164
165.LP
166.nf
9566fb1a 167\fBzfs\fR \fBsend\fR [\fB-DnPpRv\fR] [\fB-\fR[\fBiI\fR] \fIsnapshot\fR] \fIsnapshot\fR
058ac9ba
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168.fi
169
170.LP
171.nf
10b75496 172\fBzfs\fR \fBreceive | recv\fR [\fB-vnFu\fR] \fIfilesystem\fR|\fIvolume\fR|\fIsnapshot\fR
058ac9ba
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173.fi
174
175.LP
176.nf
bb8b81ec 177\fBzfs\fR \fBreceive | recv\fR [\fB-vnFu\fR] [\fB-d\fR|\fB-e\fR] \fIfilesystem\fR
058ac9ba
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178.fi
179
180.LP
181.nf
182\fBzfs\fR \fBallow\fR \fIfilesystem\fR|\fIvolume\fR
183.fi
184
185.LP
186.nf
187\fBzfs\fR \fBallow\fR [\fB-ldug\fR] "\fIeveryone\fR"|\fIuser\fR|\fIgroup\fR[,...] \fIperm\fR|\fI@setname\fR[,...]
188 \fIfilesystem\fR|\fIvolume\fR
189.fi
190
191.LP
192.nf
193\fBzfs\fR \fBallow\fR [\fB-ld\fR] \fB-e\fR \fIperm\fR|@\fIsetname\fR[,...] \fIfilesystem\fR|\fIvolume\fR
194.fi
195
196.LP
197.nf
198\fBzfs\fR \fBallow\fR \fB-c\fR \fIperm\fR|@\fIsetname\fR[,...] \fIfilesystem\fR|\fIvolume\fR
199.fi
200
201.LP
202.nf
203\fBzfs\fR \fBallow\fR \fB-s\fR @\fIsetname\fR \fIperm\fR|@\fIsetname\fR[,...] \fIfilesystem\fR|\fIvolume\fR
204.fi
205
206.LP
207.nf
208\fBzfs\fR \fBunallow\fR [\fB-rldug\fR] "\fIeveryone\fR"|\fIuser\fR|\fIgroup\fR[,...] [\fIperm\fR|@\fIsetname\fR[,... ]]
209 \fIfilesystem\fR|\fIvolume\fR
210.fi
211
212.LP
213.nf
214\fBzfs\fR \fBunallow\fR [\fB-rld\fR] \fB-e\fR [\fIperm\fR|@\fIsetname\fR[,... ]] \fIfilesystem\fR|\fIvolume\fR
215.fi
216
217.LP
218.nf
219\fBzfs\fR \fBunallow\fR [\fB-r\fR] \fB-c\fR [\fIperm\fR|@\fIsetname\fR[ ... ]] \fIfilesystem\fR|\fIvolume\fR
220.fi
221
222.LP
223.nf
224\fBzfs\fR \fBunallow\fR [\fB-r\fR] \fB-s\fR @\fIsetname\fR [\fIperm\fR|@\fIsetname\fR[,... ]] \fIfilesystem\fR|\fIvolume\fR
225.fi
226
227.LP
228.nf
229\fBzfs\fR \fBhold\fR [\fB-r\fR] \fItag\fR \fIsnapshot\fR...
230.fi
231
232.LP
233.nf
234\fBzfs\fR \fBholds\fR [\fB-r\fR] \fIsnapshot\fR...
235.fi
236
237.LP
238.nf
239\fBzfs\fR \fBrelease\fR [\fB-r\fR] \fItag\fR \fIsnapshot\fR...
240.fi
241
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242.LP
243.nf
244\fBzfs\fR \fBdiff\fR [\fB-FHt\fR] \fIsnapshot\fR \fIsnapshot|filesystem\fR
245
058ac9ba
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246.SH DESCRIPTION
247.sp
248.LP
2d1b7b0b 249The \fBzfs\fR command configures \fBZFS\fR datasets within a \fBZFS\fR storage pool, as described in \fBzpool\fR(8). A dataset is identified by a unique path within the \fBZFS\fR namespace. For example:
058ac9ba
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250.sp
251.in +2
252.nf
253pool/{filesystem,volume,snapshot}
254.fi
255.in -2
256.sp
257
258.sp
259.LP
260where the maximum length of a dataset name is \fBMAXNAMELEN\fR (256 bytes).
261.sp
262.LP
263A dataset can be one of the following:
264.sp
265.ne 2
266.mk
267.na
268\fB\fIfile system\fR\fR
269.ad
270.sp .6
271.RS 4n
272A \fBZFS\fR dataset of type \fBfilesystem\fR can be mounted within the standard system namespace and behaves like other file systems. While \fBZFS\fR file systems are designed to be \fBPOSIX\fR compliant, known issues exist that prevent compliance in some cases. Applications that depend on standards conformance might fail due to nonstandard behavior when checking file system free space.
273.RE
274
275.sp
276.ne 2
277.mk
278.na
279\fB\fIvolume\fR\fR
280.ad
281.sp .6
282.RS 4n
283A logical volume exported as a raw or block device. This type of dataset should only be used under special circumstances. File systems are typically used in most environments.
284.RE
285
286.sp
287.ne 2
288.mk
289.na
290\fB\fIsnapshot\fR\fR
291.ad
292.sp .6
293.RS 4n
294A read-only version of a file system or volume at a given point in time. It is specified as \fIfilesystem@name\fR or \fIvolume@name\fR.
295.RE
296
297.SS "ZFS File System Hierarchy"
298.sp
299.LP
300A \fBZFS\fR storage pool is a logical collection of devices that provide space for datasets. A storage pool is also the root of the \fBZFS\fR file system hierarchy.
301.sp
302.LP
2d1b7b0b 303The root of the pool can be accessed as a file system, such as mounting and unmounting, taking snapshots, and setting properties. The physical storage characteristics, however, are managed by the \fBzpool\fR(8) command.
058ac9ba
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304.sp
305.LP
2d1b7b0b 306See \fBzpool\fR(8) for more information on creating and administering pools.
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307.SS "Snapshots"
308.sp
309.LP
310A snapshot is a read-only copy of a file system or volume. Snapshots can be created extremely quickly, and initially consume no additional space within the pool. As data within the active dataset changes, the snapshot consumes more data than would otherwise be shared with the active dataset.
311.sp
312.LP
313Snapshots can have arbitrary names. Snapshots of volumes can be cloned or rolled back, but cannot be accessed independently.
314.sp
315.LP
316File system snapshots can be accessed under the \fB\&.zfs/snapshot\fR directory in the root of the file system. Snapshots are automatically mounted on demand and may be unmounted at regular intervals. The visibility of the \fB\&.zfs\fR directory can be controlled by the \fBsnapdir\fR property.
317.SS "Clones"
318.sp
319.LP
320A clone is a writable volume or file system whose initial contents are the same as another dataset. As with snapshots, creating a clone is nearly instantaneous, and initially consumes no additional space.
321.sp
322.LP
323Clones can only be created from a snapshot. When a snapshot is cloned, it creates an implicit dependency between the parent and child. Even though the clone is created somewhere else in the dataset hierarchy, the original snapshot cannot be destroyed as long as a clone exists. The \fBorigin\fR property exposes this dependency, and the \fBdestroy\fR command lists any such dependencies, if they exist.
324.sp
325.LP
326The clone parent-child dependency relationship can be reversed by using the \fBpromote\fR subcommand. This causes the "origin" file system to become a clone of the specified file system, which makes it possible to destroy the file system that the clone was created from.
327.SS "Mount Points"
328.sp
329.LP
9a616b5d 330Creating a \fBZFS\fR file system is a simple operation, so the number of file systems per system is likely to be numerous. To cope with this, \fBZFS\fR automatically manages mounting and unmounting file systems without the need to edit the \fB/etc/fstab\fR file. All automatically managed file systems are mounted by \fBZFS\fR at boot time.
058ac9ba
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331.sp
332.LP
333By default, file systems are mounted under \fB/\fIpath\fR\fR, where \fIpath\fR is the name of the file system in the \fBZFS\fR namespace. Directories are created and destroyed as needed.
334.sp
335.LP
9a616b5d 336A file system can also have a mount point set in the \fBmountpoint\fR property. This directory is created as needed, and \fBZFS\fR automatically mounts the file system when the \fBzfs mount -a\fR command is invoked (without editing \fB/etc/fstab\fR). The \fBmountpoint\fR property can be inherited, so if \fBpool/home\fR has a mount point of \fB/export/stuff\fR, then \fBpool/home/user\fR automatically inherits a mount point of \fB/export/stuff/user\fR.
058ac9ba
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337.sp
338.LP
339A file system \fBmountpoint\fR property of \fBnone\fR prevents the file system from being mounted.
340.sp
341.LP
9a616b5d 342If needed, \fBZFS\fR file systems can also be managed with traditional tools (\fBmount\fR, \fBumount\fR, \fB/etc/fstab\fR). If a file system's mount point is set to \fBlegacy\fR, \fBZFS\fR makes no attempt to manage the file system, and the administrator is responsible for mounting and unmounting the file system.
c8f25918
KA
343.SS "Deduplication"
344.sp
345.LP
346Deduplication is the process for removing redundant data at the block-level, reducing the total amount of data stored. If a file system has the \fBdedup\fR property enabled, duplicate data blocks are removed synchronously. The result is that only unique data is stored and common components are shared among files.
058ac9ba
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347.SS "Native Properties"
348.sp
349.LP
350Properties are divided into two types, native properties and user-defined (or "user") properties. Native properties either export internal statistics or control \fBZFS\fR behavior. In addition, native properties are either editable or read-only. User properties have no effect on \fBZFS\fR behavior, but you can use them to annotate datasets in a way that is meaningful in your environment. For more information about user properties, see the "User Properties" section, below.
351.sp
352.LP
353Every dataset has a set of properties that export statistics about the dataset as well as control various behaviors. Properties are inherited from the parent unless overridden by the child. Some properties apply only to certain types of datasets (file systems, volumes, or snapshots).
354.sp
355.LP
356The values of numeric properties can be specified using human-readable suffixes (for example, \fBk\fR, \fBKB\fR, \fBM\fR, \fBGb\fR, and so forth, up to \fBZ\fR for zettabyte). The following are all valid (and equal) specifications:
357.sp
358.in +2
359.nf
3601536M, 1.5g, 1.50GB
361.fi
362.in -2
363.sp
364
365.sp
366.LP
367The values of non-numeric properties are case sensitive and must be lowercase, except for \fBmountpoint\fR, \fBsharenfs\fR, and \fBsharesmb\fR.
368.sp
369.LP
370The following native properties consist of read-only statistics about the dataset. These properties can be neither set, nor inherited. Native properties apply to all dataset types unless otherwise noted.
371.sp
372.ne 2
373.mk
374.na
375\fB\fBavailable\fR\fR
376.ad
377.sp .6
378.RS 4n
379The amount of space available to the dataset and all its children, assuming that there is no other activity in the pool. Because space is shared within a pool, availability can be limited by any number of factors, including physical pool size, quotas, reservations, or other datasets within the pool.
380.sp
381This property can also be referred to by its shortened column name, \fBavail\fR.
382.RE
383
384.sp
385.ne 2
386.mk
387.na
388\fB\fBcompressratio\fR\fR
389.ad
390.sp .6
391.RS 4n
f5fc4aca 392For non-snapshots, the compression ratio achieved for the \fBused\fR space of this dataset, expressed as a multiplier. The \fBused\fR property includes descendant datasets, and, for clones, does not include the space shared with the origin snapshot. For snapshots, the \fBcompressratio\fR is the same as the \fBrefcompressratio\fR property. Compression can be turned on by running: \fBzfs set compression=on \fIdataset\fR\fR. The default value is \fBoff\fR.
058ac9ba
BB
393.RE
394
395.sp
396.ne 2
397.mk
398.na
399\fB\fBcreation\fR\fR
400.ad
401.sp .6
402.RS 4n
403The time this dataset was created.
404.RE
405
406.sp
407.ne 2
408.mk
409.na
330d06f9
MA
410\fB\fBclones\fR\fR
411.ad
412.sp .6
413.RS 4n
414For snapshots, this property is a comma-separated list of filesystems or
415volumes which are clones of this snapshot. The clones' \fBorigin\fR property
416is this snapshot. If the \fBclones\fR property is not empty, then this
417snapshot can not be destroyed (even with the \fB-r\fR or \fB-f\fR options).
418.RE
419
420.sp
421.ne 2
422.na
058ac9ba
BB
423\fB\fBdefer_destroy\fR\fR
424.ad
425.sp .6
426.RS 4n
3b204150 427This property is \fBon\fR if the snapshot has been marked for deferred destruction by using the \fBzfs destroy\fR \fB-d\fR command. Otherwise, the property is \fBoff\fR.
058ac9ba
BB
428.RE
429
430.sp
431.ne 2
432.mk
433.na
434\fB\fBmounted\fR\fR
435.ad
436.sp .6
437.RS 4n
438For file systems, indicates whether the file system is currently mounted. This property can be either \fByes\fR or \fBno\fR.
439.RE
440
441.sp
442.ne 2
443.mk
444.na
445\fB\fBorigin\fR\fR
446.ad
447.sp .6
448.RS 4n
330d06f9 449For cloned file systems or volumes, the snapshot from which the clone was created. See also the \fBclones\fR property.
058ac9ba
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450.RE
451
452.sp
453.ne 2
454.mk
455.na
456\fB\fBreferenced\fR\fR
457.ad
458.sp .6
459.RS 4n
460The amount of data that is accessible by this dataset, which may or may not be shared with other datasets in the pool. When a snapshot or clone is created, it initially references the same amount of space as the file system or snapshot it was created from, since its contents are identical.
461.sp
462This property can also be referred to by its shortened column name, \fBrefer\fR.
463.RE
464
f5fc4aca
MA
465.sp
466.ne 2
467.mk
468.na
469\fB\fBrefcompressratio\fR\fR
470.ad
471.sp .6
472.RS 4n
473The compression ratio achieved for the \fBreferenced\fR space of this
474dataset, expressed as a multiplier. See also the \fBcompressratio\fR
475property.
476.RE
477
058ac9ba
BB
478.sp
479.ne 2
480.mk
481.na
482\fB\fBtype\fR\fR
483.ad
484.sp .6
485.RS 4n
486The type of dataset: \fBfilesystem\fR, \fBvolume\fR, or \fBsnapshot\fR.
487.RE
488
489.sp
490.ne 2
491.mk
492.na
493\fB\fBused\fR\fR
494.ad
495.sp .6
496.RS 4n
497The amount of space consumed by this dataset and all its descendents. This is the value that is checked against this dataset's quota and reservation. The space used does not include this dataset's reservation, but does take into account the reservations of any descendent datasets. The amount of space that a dataset consumes from its parent, as well as the amount of space that are freed if this dataset is recursively destroyed, is the greater of its space used and its reservation.
498.sp
499When snapshots (see the "Snapshots" section) are created, their space is initially shared between the snapshot and the file system, and possibly with previous snapshots. As the file system changes, space that was previously shared becomes unique to the snapshot, and counted in the snapshot's space used. Additionally, deleting snapshots can increase the amount of space unique to (and used by) other snapshots.
500.sp
2d1b7b0b 501The amount of space used, available, or referenced does not take into account pending changes. Pending changes are generally accounted for within a few seconds. Committing a change to a disk using \fBfsync\fR(2) or \fBO_SYNC\fR does not necessarily guarantee that the space usage information is updated immediately.
058ac9ba
BB
502.RE
503
504.sp
505.ne 2
506.mk
507.na
508\fB\fBusedby*\fR\fR
509.ad
510.sp .6
511.RS 4n
512The \fBusedby*\fR properties decompose the \fBused\fR properties into the various reasons that space is used. Specifically, \fBused\fR = \fBusedbychildren\fR + \fBusedbydataset\fR + \fBusedbyrefreservation\fR +, \fBusedbysnapshots\fR. These properties are only available for datasets created on \fBzpool\fR "version 13" pools.
513.RE
514
515.sp
516.ne 2
517.mk
518.na
519\fB\fBusedbychildren\fR\fR
520.ad
521.sp .6
522.RS 4n
523The amount of space used by children of this dataset, which would be freed if all the dataset's children were destroyed.
524.RE
525
526.sp
527.ne 2
528.mk
529.na
530\fB\fBusedbydataset\fR\fR
531.ad
532.sp .6
533.RS 4n
534The amount of space used by this dataset itself, which would be freed if the dataset were destroyed (after first removing any \fBrefreservation\fR and destroying any necessary snapshots or descendents).
535.RE
536
537.sp
538.ne 2
539.mk
540.na
541\fB\fBusedbyrefreservation\fR\fR
542.ad
543.sp .6
544.RS 4n
545The amount of space used by a \fBrefreservation\fR set on this dataset, which would be freed if the \fBrefreservation\fR was removed.
546.RE
547
548.sp
549.ne 2
550.mk
551.na
552\fB\fBusedbysnapshots\fR\fR
553.ad
554.sp .6
555.RS 4n
556The amount of space consumed by snapshots of this dataset. In particular, it is the amount of space that would be freed if all of this dataset's snapshots were destroyed. Note that this is not simply the sum of the snapshots' \fBused\fR properties because space can be shared by multiple snapshots.
557.RE
558
559.sp
560.ne 2
561.mk
562.na
563\fB\fBuserused@\fR\fIuser\fR\fR
564.ad
565.sp .6
566.RS 4n
567The amount of space consumed by the specified user in this dataset. Space is charged to the owner of each file, as displayed by \fBls\fR \fB-l\fR. The amount of space charged is displayed by \fBdu\fR and \fBls\fR \fB-s\fR. See the \fBzfs userspace\fR subcommand for more information.
568.sp
569Unprivileged users can access only their own space usage. The root user, or a user who has been granted the \fBuserused\fR privilege with \fBzfs allow\fR, can access everyone's usage.
570.sp
571The \fBuserused@\fR... properties are not displayed by \fBzfs get all\fR. The user's name must be appended after the \fB@\fR symbol, using one of the following forms:
572.RS +4
573.TP
574.ie t \(bu
575.el o
576\fIPOSIX name\fR (for example, \fBjoe\fR)
577.RE
578.RS +4
579.TP
580.ie t \(bu
581.el o
582\fIPOSIX numeric ID\fR (for example, \fB789\fR)
583.RE
584.RS +4
585.TP
586.ie t \(bu
587.el o
588\fISID name\fR (for example, \fBjoe.smith@mydomain\fR)
589.RE
590.RS +4
591.TP
592.ie t \(bu
593.el o
594\fISID numeric ID\fR (for example, \fBS-1-123-456-789\fR)
595.RE
596.RE
597
598.sp
599.ne 2
600.mk
601.na
602\fB\fBuserrefs\fR\fR
603.ad
604.sp .6
605.RS 4n
606This property is set to the number of user holds on this snapshot. User holds are set by using the \fBzfs hold\fR command.
607.RE
608
609.sp
610.ne 2
611.mk
612.na
613\fB\fBgroupused@\fR\fIgroup\fR\fR
614.ad
615.sp .6
616.RS 4n
617The amount of space consumed by the specified group in this dataset. Space is charged to the group of each file, as displayed by \fBls\fR \fB-l\fR. See the \fBuserused@\fR\fIuser\fR property for more information.
618.sp
619Unprivileged users can only access their own groups' space usage. The root user, or a user who has been granted the \fBgroupused\fR privilege with \fBzfs allow\fR, can access all groups' usage.
620.RE
621
622.sp
623.ne 2
624.mk
625.na
626\fB\fBvolblocksize\fR=\fIblocksize\fR\fR
627.ad
628.sp .6
629.RS 4n
630For volumes, specifies the block size of the volume. The \fBblocksize\fR cannot be changed once the volume has been written, so it should be set at volume creation time. The default \fBblocksize\fR for volumes is 8 Kbytes. Any power of 2 from 512 bytes to 128 Kbytes is valid.
631.sp
632This property can also be referred to by its shortened column name, \fBvolblock\fR.
633.RE
634
330d06f9
MA
635.sp
636.ne 2
637.na
638\fB\fBwritten\fR\fR
639.ad
640.sp .6
641.RS 4n
642The amount of \fBreferenced\fR space written to this dataset since the
643previous snapshot.
644.RE
645
646.sp
647.ne 2
648.na
649\fB\fBwritten@\fR\fIsnapshot\fR\fR
650.ad
651.sp .6
652.RS 4n
653The amount of \fBreferenced\fR space written to this dataset since the
654specified snapshot. This is the space that is referenced by this dataset
655but was not referenced by the specified snapshot.
656.sp
657The \fIsnapshot\fR may be specified as a short snapshot name (just the part
658after the \fB@\fR), in which case it will be interpreted as a snapshot in
659the same filesystem as this dataset.
660The \fIsnapshot\fR be a full snapshot name (\fIfilesystem\fR@\fIsnapshot\fR),
661which for clones may be a snapshot in the origin's filesystem (or the origin
662of the origin's filesystem, etc).
663.RE
664
058ac9ba
BB
665.sp
666.LP
667The following native properties can be used to change the behavior of a \fBZFS\fR dataset.
668.sp
669.ne 2
670.mk
671.na
672\fB\fBaclinherit\fR=\fBdiscard\fR | \fBnoallow\fR | \fBrestricted\fR | \fBpassthrough\fR | \fBpassthrough-x\fR\fR
673.ad
674.sp .6
675.RS 4n
676Controls how \fBACL\fR entries are inherited when files and directories are created. A file system with an \fBaclinherit\fR property of \fBdiscard\fR does not inherit any \fBACL\fR entries. A file system with an \fBaclinherit\fR property value of \fBnoallow\fR only inherits inheritable \fBACL\fR entries that specify "deny" permissions. The property value \fBrestricted\fR (the default) removes the \fBwrite_acl\fR and \fBwrite_owner\fR permissions when the \fBACL\fR entry is inherited. A file system with an \fBaclinherit\fR property value of \fBpassthrough\fR inherits all inheritable \fBACL\fR entries without any modifications made to the \fBACL\fR entries when they are inherited. A file system with an \fBaclinherit\fR property value of \fBpassthrough-x\fR has the same meaning as \fBpassthrough\fR, except that the \fBowner@\fR, \fBgroup@\fR, and \fBeveryone@\fR \fBACE\fRs inherit the execute permission only if the file creation mode also requests the execute bit.
677.sp
678When the property value is set to \fBpassthrough\fR, files are created with a mode determined by the inheritable \fBACE\fRs. If no inheritable \fBACE\fRs exist that affect the mode, then the mode is set in accordance to the requested mode from the application.
679.RE
680
681.sp
682.ne 2
683.mk
684.na
685\fB\fBaclmode\fR=\fBdiscard\fR | \fBgroupmask\fR | \fBpassthrough\fR\fR
686.ad
687.sp .6
688.RS 4n
689Controls how an \fBACL\fR is modified during \fBchmod\fR(2). A file system with an \fBaclmode\fR property of \fBdiscard\fR deletes all \fBACL\fR entries that do not represent the mode of the file. An \fBaclmode\fR property of \fBgroupmask\fR (the default) reduces user or group permissions. The permissions are reduced, such that they are no greater than the group permission bits, unless it is a user entry that has the same \fBUID\fR as the owner of the file or directory. In this case, the \fBACL\fR permissions are reduced so that they are no greater than owner permission bits. A file system with an \fBaclmode\fR property of \fBpassthrough\fR indicates that no changes are made to the \fBACL\fR other than generating the necessary \fBACL\fR entries to represent the new mode of the file or directory.
690.RE
691
692.sp
693.ne 2
694.mk
695.na
696\fB\fBatime\fR=\fBon\fR | \fBoff\fR\fR
697.ad
698.sp .6
699.RS 4n
700Controls whether the access time for files is updated when they are read. Turning this property off avoids producing write traffic when reading files and can result in significant performance gains, though it might confuse mailers and other similar utilities. The default value is \fBon\fR.
701.RE
702
703.sp
704.ne 2
705.mk
706.na
707\fB\fBcanmount\fR=\fBon\fR | \fBoff\fR | \fBnoauto\fR\fR
708.ad
709.sp .6
710.RS 4n
711If this property is set to \fBoff\fR, the file system cannot be mounted, and is ignored by \fBzfs mount -a\fR. Setting this property to \fBoff\fR is similar to setting the \fBmountpoint\fR property to \fBnone\fR, except that the dataset still has a normal \fBmountpoint\fR property, which can be inherited. Setting this property to \fBoff\fR allows datasets to be used solely as a mechanism to inherit properties. One example of setting \fBcanmount=\fR\fBoff\fR is to have two datasets with the same \fBmountpoint\fR, so that the children of both datasets appear in the same directory, but might have different inherited characteristics.
712.sp
713When the \fBnoauto\fR option is set, a dataset can only be mounted and unmounted explicitly. The dataset is not mounted automatically when the dataset is created or imported, nor is it mounted by the \fBzfs mount -a\fR command or unmounted by the \fBzfs unmount -a\fR command.
714.sp
715This property is not inherited.
716.RE
717
718.sp
719.ne 2
720.mk
721.na
722\fB\fBchecksum\fR=\fBon\fR | \fBoff\fR | \fBfletcher2,\fR| \fBfletcher4\fR | \fBsha256\fR\fR
723.ad
724.sp .6
725.RS 4n
e43b290f 726Controls the checksum used to verify data integrity. The default value is \fBon\fR, which automatically selects an appropriate algorithm (currently, \fBfletcher4\fR, but this may change in future releases). The value \fBoff\fR disables integrity checking on user data. Disabling checksums is \fBNOT\fR a recommended practice.
058ac9ba
BB
727.sp
728Changing this property affects only newly-written data.
729.RE
730
731.sp
732.ne 2
733.mk
734.na
9759c60f 735\fBcompression\fR=\fBon\fR | \fBoff\fR | \fBlzjb\fR | \fBgzip\fR | \fBgzip-\fR\fIN\fR | \fBzle\fR | \fBlz4\fR
058ac9ba
BB
736.ad
737.sp .6
738.RS 4n
f4605f07
RL
739Controls the compression algorithm used for this dataset. The \fBlzjb\fR compression algorithm is optimized for performance while providing decent data compression. Setting compression to \fBon\fR uses the \fBlzjb\fR compression algorithm.
740.sp
741The \fBgzip\fR compression algorithm uses the same compression as the \fBgzip\fR(1) command. You can specify the \fBgzip\fR level by using the value \fBgzip-\fR\fIN\fR where \fIN\fR is an integer from 1 (fastest) to 9 (best compression ratio). Currently, \fBgzip\fR is equivalent to \fBgzip-6\fR (which is also the default for \fBgzip\fR(1)).
742.sp
743The \fBzle\fR (zero-length encoding) compression algorithm is a fast and simple algorithm to eliminate runs of zeroes.
058ac9ba 744.sp
9759c60f
ED
745The \fBlz4\fR compression algorithm is a high-performance replacement
746for the \fBlzjb\fR algorithm. It features significantly faster
747compression and decompression, as well as a moderately higher
748compression ratio than \fBlzjb\fR, but can only be used on pools with
749the \fBlz4_compress\fR feature set to \fIenabled\fR. See
750\fBzpool-features\fR(5) for details on ZFS feature flags and the
751\fBlz4_compress\fR feature.
752.sp
058ac9ba
BB
753This property can also be referred to by its shortened column name \fBcompress\fR. Changing this property affects only newly-written data.
754.RE
755
756.sp
757.ne 2
758.mk
759.na
760\fB\fBcopies\fR=\fB1\fR | \fB2\fR | \fB3\fR\fR
761.ad
762.sp .6
763.RS 4n
764Controls the number of copies of data stored for this dataset. These copies are in addition to any redundancy provided by the pool, for example, mirroring or RAID-Z. The copies are stored on different disks, if possible. The space used by multiple copies is charged to the associated file and dataset, changing the \fBused\fR property and counting against quotas and reservations.
765.sp
766Changing this property only affects newly-written data. Therefore, set this property at file system creation time by using the \fB-o\fR \fBcopies=\fR\fIN\fR option.
767.RE
768
c8f25918
KA
769.sp
770.ne 2
771.mk
772.na
773\fB\fBdedup\fR=\fBon\fR | \fBoff\fR | \fBverify\fR | \fBsha256\fR[,\fBverify\fR]\fR
774.ad
775.sp .6
776.RS 4n
777Controls whether deduplication is in effect for a dataset. The default value is \fBoff\fR. The default checksum used for deduplication is \fBsha256\fR (subject to change). When \fBdedup\fR is enabled, the \fBdedup\fR checksum algorithm overrides the \fBchecksum\fR property. Setting the value to \fBverify\fR is equivalent to specifying \fBsha256,verify\fR.
778.sp
779If the property is set to \fBverify\fR, then, whenever two blocks have the same signature, ZFS will do a byte-for-byte comparison with the existing block to ensure that the contents are identical.
780.RE
781
058ac9ba
BB
782.sp
783.ne 2
784.mk
785.na
786\fB\fBdevices\fR=\fBon\fR | \fBoff\fR\fR
787.ad
788.sp .6
789.RS 4n
790Controls whether device nodes can be opened on this file system. The default value is \fBon\fR.
791.RE
792
793.sp
794.ne 2
795.mk
796.na
797\fB\fBexec\fR=\fBon\fR | \fBoff\fR\fR
798.ad
799.sp .6
800.RS 4n
801Controls whether processes can be executed from within this file system. The default value is \fBon\fR.
802.RE
803
c8f25918
KA
804.sp
805.ne 2
806.mk
807.na
808\fB\fBmlslabel\fR=\fIlabel\fR | \fBnone\fR\fR
809.ad
810.sp .6
811.RS 4n
812The \fBmlslabel\fR property is a sensitivity label that determines if a dataset can be mounted in a zone on a system with Trusted Extensions enabled. If the labeled dataset matches the labeled zone, the dataset can be mounted and accessed from the labeled zone.
813.sp
814When the \fBmlslabel\fR property is not set, the default value is \fBnone\fR. Setting the \fBmlslabel\fR property to \fBnone\fR is equivalent to removing the property.
815.sp
816The \fBmlslabel\fR property can be modified only when Trusted Extensions is enabled and only with appropriate privilege. Rights to modify it cannot be delegated. When changing a label to a higher label or setting the initial dataset label, the \fB{PRIV_FILE_UPGRADE_SL}\fR privilege is required. When changing a label to a lower label or the default (\fBnone\fR), the \fB{PRIV_FILE_DOWNGRADE_SL}\fR privilege is required. Changing the dataset to labels other than the default can be done only when the dataset is not mounted. When a dataset with the default label is mounted into a labeled-zone, the mount operation automatically sets the \fBmlslabel\fR property to the label of that zone.
817.sp
818When Trusted Extensions is \fBnot\fR enabled, only datasets with the default label (\fBnone\fR) can be mounted.
819.sp
820Zones are a Solaris feature and are not relevant on Linux.
821.RE
822
058ac9ba
BB
823.sp
824.ne 2
825.mk
826.na
827\fB\fBmountpoint\fR=\fIpath\fR | \fBnone\fR | \fBlegacy\fR\fR
828.ad
829.sp .6
830.RS 4n
831Controls the mount point used for this file system. See the "Mount Points" section for more information on how this property is used.
832.sp
833When the \fBmountpoint\fR property is changed for a file system, the file system and any children that inherit the mount point are unmounted. If the new value is \fBlegacy\fR, then they remain unmounted. Otherwise, they are automatically remounted in the new location if the property was previously \fBlegacy\fR or \fBnone\fR, or if they were mounted before the property was changed. In addition, any shared file systems are unshared and shared in the new location.
834.RE
835
836.sp
837.ne 2
838.mk
839.na
840\fB\fBnbmand\fR=\fBon\fR | \fBoff\fR\fR
841.ad
842.sp .6
843.RS 4n
2d1b7b0b 844Controls whether the file system should be mounted with \fBnbmand\fR (Non Blocking mandatory locks). This is used for \fBCIFS\fR clients. Changes to this property only take effect when the file system is umounted and remounted. See \fBmount\fR(8) for more information on \fBnbmand\fR mounts.
058ac9ba
BB
845.RE
846
847.sp
848.ne 2
849.mk
850.na
851\fB\fBprimarycache\fR=\fBall\fR | \fBnone\fR | \fBmetadata\fR\fR
852.ad
853.sp .6
854.RS 4n
855Controls what is cached in the primary cache (ARC). If this property is set to \fBall\fR, then both user data and metadata is cached. If this property is set to \fBnone\fR, then neither user data nor metadata is cached. If this property is set to \fBmetadata\fR, then only metadata is cached. The default value is \fBall\fR.
856.RE
857
858.sp
859.ne 2
860.mk
861.na
862\fB\fBquota\fR=\fIsize\fR | \fBnone\fR\fR
863.ad
864.sp .6
865.RS 4n
866Limits the amount of space a dataset and its descendents can consume. This property enforces a hard limit on the amount of space used. This includes all space consumed by descendents, including file systems and snapshots. Setting a quota on a descendent of a dataset that already has a quota does not override the ancestor's quota, but rather imposes an additional limit.
867.sp
868Quotas cannot be set on volumes, as the \fBvolsize\fR property acts as an implicit quota.
869.RE
870
871.sp
872.ne 2
873.mk
874.na
875\fB\fBuserquota@\fR\fIuser\fR=\fIsize\fR | \fBnone\fR\fR
876.ad
877.sp .6
878.RS 4n
c8f25918 879Limits the amount of space consumed by the specified user. Similar to the \fBrefquota\fR property, the \fBuserquota\fR space calculation does not include space that is used by descendent datasets, such as snapshots and clones. User space consumption is identified by the \fBuserspace@\fR\fIuser\fR property.
058ac9ba
BB
880.sp
881Enforcement of user quotas may be delayed by several seconds. This delay means that a user might exceed their quota before the system notices that they are over quota and begins to refuse additional writes with the \fBEDQUOT\fR error message . See the \fBzfs userspace\fR subcommand for more information.
882.sp
883Unprivileged users can only access their own groups' space usage. The root user, or a user who has been granted the \fBuserquota\fR privilege with \fBzfs allow\fR, can get and set everyone's quota.
884.sp
885This property is not available on volumes, on file systems before version 4, or on pools before version 15. The \fBuserquota@\fR... properties are not displayed by \fBzfs get all\fR. The user's name must be appended after the \fB@\fR symbol, using one of the following forms:
886.RS +4
887.TP
888.ie t \(bu
889.el o
890\fIPOSIX name\fR (for example, \fBjoe\fR)
891.RE
892.RS +4
893.TP
894.ie t \(bu
895.el o
896\fIPOSIX numeric ID\fR (for example, \fB789\fR)
897.RE
898.RS +4
899.TP
900.ie t \(bu
901.el o
902\fISID name\fR (for example, \fBjoe.smith@mydomain\fR)
903.RE
904.RS +4
905.TP
906.ie t \(bu
907.el o
908\fISID numeric ID\fR (for example, \fBS-1-123-456-789\fR)
909.RE
910.RE
911
912.sp
913.ne 2
914.mk
915.na
916\fB\fBgroupquota@\fR\fIgroup\fR=\fIsize\fR | \fBnone\fR\fR
917.ad
918.sp .6
919.RS 4n
920Limits the amount of space consumed by the specified group. Group space consumption is identified by the \fBuserquota@\fR\fIuser\fR property.
921.sp
922Unprivileged users can access only their own groups' space usage. The root user, or a user who has been granted the \fBgroupquota\fR privilege with \fBzfs allow\fR, can get and set all groups' quotas.
923.RE
924
925.sp
926.ne 2
927.mk
928.na
929\fB\fBreadonly\fR=\fBon\fR | \fBoff\fR\fR
930.ad
931.sp .6
932.RS 4n
933Controls whether this dataset can be modified. The default value is \fBoff\fR.
934.sp
935This property can also be referred to by its shortened column name, \fBrdonly\fR.
936.RE
937
938.sp
939.ne 2
940.mk
941.na
942\fB\fBrecordsize\fR=\fIsize\fR\fR
943.ad
944.sp .6
945.RS 4n
946Specifies a suggested block size for files in the file system. This property is designed solely for use with database workloads that access files in fixed-size records. \fBZFS\fR automatically tunes block sizes according to internal algorithms optimized for typical access patterns.
947.sp
948For databases that create very large files but access them in small random chunks, these algorithms may be suboptimal. Specifying a \fBrecordsize\fR greater than or equal to the record size of the database can result in significant performance gains. Use of this property for general purpose file systems is strongly discouraged, and may adversely affect performance.
949.sp
950The size specified must be a power of two greater than or equal to 512 and less than or equal to 128 Kbytes.
951.sp
952Changing the file system's \fBrecordsize\fR affects only files created afterward; existing files are unaffected.
953.sp
954This property can also be referred to by its shortened column name, \fBrecsize\fR.
955.RE
956
957.sp
958.ne 2
959.mk
960.na
961\fB\fBrefquota\fR=\fIsize\fR | \fBnone\fR\fR
962.ad
963.sp .6
964.RS 4n
965Limits the amount of space a dataset can consume. This property enforces a hard limit on the amount of space used. This hard limit does not include space used by descendents, including file systems and snapshots.
966.RE
967
968.sp
969.ne 2
970.mk
971.na
972\fB\fBrefreservation\fR=\fIsize\fR | \fBnone\fR\fR
973.ad
974.sp .6
975.RS 4n
976The minimum amount of space guaranteed to a dataset, not including its descendents. When the amount of space used is below this value, the dataset is treated as if it were taking up the amount of space specified by \fBrefreservation\fR. The \fBrefreservation\fR reservation is accounted for in the parent datasets' space used, and counts against the parent datasets' quotas and reservations.
977.sp
978If \fBrefreservation\fR is set, a snapshot is only allowed if there is enough free pool space outside of this reservation to accommodate the current number of "referenced" bytes in the dataset.
979.sp
980This property can also be referred to by its shortened column name, \fBrefreserv\fR.
981.RE
982
983.sp
984.ne 2
985.mk
986.na
987\fB\fBreservation\fR=\fIsize\fR | \fBnone\fR\fR
988.ad
989.sp .6
990.RS 4n
991The minimum amount of space guaranteed to a dataset and its descendents. When the amount of space used is below this value, the dataset is treated as if it were taking up the amount of space specified by its reservation. Reservations are accounted for in the parent datasets' space used, and count against the parent datasets' quotas and reservations.
992.sp
993This property can also be referred to by its shortened column name, \fBreserv\fR.
994.RE
995
996.sp
997.ne 2
998.mk
999.na
1000\fB\fBsecondarycache\fR=\fBall\fR | \fBnone\fR | \fBmetadata\fR\fR
1001.ad
1002.sp .6
1003.RS 4n
1004Controls what is cached in the secondary cache (L2ARC). If this property is set to \fBall\fR, then both user data and metadata is cached. If this property is set to \fBnone\fR, then neither user data nor metadata is cached. If this property is set to \fBmetadata\fR, then only metadata is cached. The default value is \fBall\fR.
1005.RE
1006
1007.sp
1008.ne 2
1009.mk
1010.na
1011\fB\fBsetuid\fR=\fBon\fR | \fBoff\fR\fR
1012.ad
1013.sp .6
1014.RS 4n
1015Controls whether the set-\fBUID\fR bit is respected for the file system. The default value is \fBon\fR.
1016.RE
1017
1018.sp
1019.ne 2
1020.mk
1021.na
1022\fB\fBshareiscsi\fR=\fBon\fR | \fBoff\fR\fR
1023.ad
1024.sp .6
1025.RS 4n
1026Like the \fBsharenfs\fR property, \fBshareiscsi\fR indicates whether a \fBZFS\fR volume is exported as an \fBiSCSI\fR target. The acceptable values for this property are \fBon\fR, \fBoff\fR, and \fBtype=disk\fR. The default value is \fBoff\fR. In the future, other target types might be supported. For example, \fBtape\fR.
1027.sp
1028You might want to set \fBshareiscsi=on\fR for a file system so that all \fBZFS\fR volumes within the file system are shared by default. However, setting this property on a file system has no direct effect.
1029.RE
1030
1031.sp
1032.ne 2
1033.mk
1034.na
645fb9cc 1035\fB\fBsharesmb\fR=\fBon\fR | \fBoff\fR
058ac9ba
BB
1036.ad
1037.sp .6
1038.RS 4n
645fb9cc 1039Controls whether the file system is shared by using \fBSamba USERSHARES\fR, and what options are to be used. Otherwise, the file system is automatically shared and unshared with the \fBzfs share\fR and \fBzfs unshare\fR commands. If the property is set to \fBon\fR, the \fBnet\fR(8) command is invoked to create a \fBUSERSHARE\fR.
058ac9ba 1040.sp
645fb9cc 1041Because \fBSMB\fR shares requires a resource name, a unique resource name is constructed from the dataset name. The constructed name is a copy of the dataset name except that the characters in the dataset name, which would be illegal in the resource name, are replaced with underscore (\fB_\fR) characters. The ZFS On Linux driver does not (yet) support additional options which might be availible in the Solaris version.
058ac9ba 1042.sp
645fb9cc 1043If the \fBsharesmb\fR property is set to \fBoff\fR, the file systems are unshared.
058ac9ba 1044.sp
4a5b1218
TF
1045In Linux, the share is created with the ACL (Access Control List) "Everyone:F" ("F" stands for "full permissions", ie. read and write permissions) and no guest access (which means samba must be able to authenticate a real user, system passwd/shadow, ldap or smbpasswd based) by default. This means that any additional access control (dissalow specific user specific access etc) must be done on the underlaying filesystem.
1046.sp
1047.in +2
1048Example to mount a SMB filesystem shared through ZFS (share/tmp):
1049.mk
1050Note that a user and his/her password \fBmust\fR be given!
1051.sp
1052.in +2
1053smbmount //127.0.0.1/share_tmp /mnt/tmp -o user=workgroup/turbo,password=obrut,uid=1000
1054.in -2
1055.in -2
645fb9cc
TF
1056.sp
1057.ne 2
1058.mk
1059.na
1060\fBMinimal /etc/samba/smb.conf configuration\fR
1061.sp
1062.in +2
1063* Samba will need to listen to 'localhost' (127.0.0.1) for the zfs utilities to communitate with samba. This is the default behavior for most Linux distributions.
1064.sp
4a5b1218
TF
1065* Samba must be able to authenticate a user. This can be done in a number of ways, depending on if using the system password file, LDAP or the Samba specific smbpasswd file. How to do this is outside the scope of this manual. Please refer to the smb.conf(5) manpage for more information.
1066.sp
1067* See the \fBUSERSHARE\fR section of the \fBsmb.conf\fR(5) man page for all configuration options in case you need to modify any options to the share afterwards. Do note that any changes done with the 'net' command will be undone if the share is every unshared (such as at a reboot etc). In the future, ZoL will be able to set specific options directly using sharesmb=<option>.
645fb9cc
TF
1068.sp
1069.in -2
058ac9ba
BB
1070.RE
1071
1072.sp
1073.ne 2
1074.mk
1075.na
1076\fB\fBsharenfs\fR=\fBon\fR | \fBoff\fR | \fIopts\fR\fR
1077.ad
1078.sp .6
1079.RS 4n
1080Controls whether the file system is shared via \fBNFS\fR, and what options are used. A file system with a \fBsharenfs\fR property of \fBoff\fR is managed through traditional tools such as \fBshare\fR(1M), \fBunshare\fR(1M), and \fBdfstab\fR(4). Otherwise, the file system is automatically shared and unshared with the \fBzfs share\fR and \fBzfs unshare\fR commands. If the property is set to \fBon\fR, the \fBshare\fR(1M) command is invoked with no options. Otherwise, the \fBshare\fR(1M) command is invoked with options equivalent to the contents of this property.
1081.sp
1082When the \fBsharenfs\fR property is changed for a dataset, the dataset and any children inheriting the property are re-shared with the new options, only if the property was previously \fBoff\fR, or if they were shared before the property was changed. If the new property is \fBoff\fR, the file systems are unshared.
1083.RE
1084
1085.sp
1086.ne 2
1087.mk
1088.na
1089\fB\fBlogbias\fR = \fBlatency\fR | \fBthroughput\fR\fR
1090.ad
1091.sp .6
1092.RS 4n
1093Provide a hint to ZFS about handling of synchronous requests in this dataset. If \fBlogbias\fR is set to \fBlatency\fR (the default), ZFS will use pool log devices (if configured) to handle the requests at low latency. If \fBlogbias\fR is set to \fBthroughput\fR, ZFS will not use configured pool log devices. ZFS will instead optimize synchronous operations for global pool throughput and efficient use of resources.
1094.RE
1095
0b4d1b58
ED
1096.sp
1097.ne 2
1098.mk
1099.na
1100\fB\fBsnapdev\fR=\fBhidden\fR | \fBvisible\fR\fR
1101.ad
1102.sp .6
1103.RS 4n
1104Controls whether the snapshots devices of zvol's are hidden or visible. The default value is \fBhidden\fR.
1105.RE
1106
058ac9ba
BB
1107.sp
1108.ne 2
1109.mk
1110.na
1111\fB\fBsnapdir\fR=\fBhidden\fR | \fBvisible\fR\fR
1112.ad
1113.sp .6
1114.RS 4n
1115Controls whether the \fB\&.zfs\fR directory is hidden or visible in the root of the file system as discussed in the "Snapshots" section. The default value is \fBhidden\fR.
1116.RE
1117
1118.sp
1119.ne 2
1120.mk
1121.na
e0fd2787 1122\fB\fBsync\fR=\fBstandard\fR | \fBalways\fR | \fBdisabled\fR\fR
330d06f9
MA
1123.ad
1124.sp .6
1125.RS 4n
1126Controls the behavior of synchronous requests (e.g. fsync, O_DSYNC).
e0fd2787 1127\fBstandard\fR is the POSIX specified behavior of ensuring all synchronous
330d06f9
MA
1128requests are written to stable storage and all devices are flushed to ensure
1129data is not cached by device controllers (this is the default). \fBalways\fR
1130causes every file system transaction to be written and flushed before its
1131system call returns. This has a large performance penalty. \fBdisabled\fR
1132disables synchronous requests. File system transactions are only committed to
1133stable storage periodically. This option will give the highest performance.
1134However, it is very dangerous as ZFS would be ignoring the synchronous
1135transaction demands of applications such as databases or NFS. Administrators
1136should only use this option when the risks are understood.
1137.RE
1138
1139.sp
1140.ne 2
1141.na
058ac9ba
BB
1142\fB\fBversion\fR=\fB1\fR | \fB2\fR | \fBcurrent\fR\fR
1143.ad
1144.sp .6
1145.RS 4n
1146The on-disk version of this file system, which is independent of the pool version. This property can only be set to later supported versions. See the \fBzfs upgrade\fR command.
1147.RE
1148
1149.sp
1150.ne 2
1151.mk
1152.na
1153\fB\fBvolsize\fR=\fIsize\fR\fR
1154.ad
1155.sp .6
1156.RS 4n
1157For volumes, specifies the logical size of the volume. By default, creating a volume establishes a reservation of equal size. For storage pools with a version number of 9 or higher, a \fBrefreservation\fR is set instead. Any changes to \fBvolsize\fR are reflected in an equivalent change to the reservation (or \fBrefreservation\fR). The \fBvolsize\fR can only be set to a multiple of \fBvolblocksize\fR, and cannot be zero.
1158.sp
1159The reservation is kept equal to the volume's logical size to prevent unexpected behavior for consumers. Without the reservation, the volume could run out of space, resulting in undefined behavior or data corruption, depending on how the volume is used. These effects can also occur when the volume size is changed while it is in use (particularly when shrinking the size). Extreme care should be used when adjusting the volume size.
1160.sp
1161Though not recommended, a "sparse volume" (also known as "thin provisioning") can be created by specifying the \fB-s\fR option to the \fBzfs create -V\fR command, or by changing the reservation after the volume has been created. A "sparse volume" is a volume where the reservation is less then the volume size. Consequently, writes to a sparse volume can fail with \fBENOSPC\fR when the pool is low on space. For a sparse volume, changes to \fBvolsize\fR are not reflected in the reservation.
1162.RE
1163
1164.sp
1165.ne 2
1166.mk
1167.na
1168\fB\fBvscan\fR=\fBon\fR | \fBoff\fR\fR
1169.ad
1170.sp .6
1171.RS 4n
1172Controls whether regular files should be scanned for viruses when a file is opened and closed. In addition to enabling this property, the virus scan service must also be enabled for virus scanning to occur. The default value is \fBoff\fR.
1173.RE
1174
1175.sp
1176.ne 2
1177.mk
1178.na
1179\fB\fBxattr\fR=\fBon\fR | \fBoff\fR\fR
1180.ad
1181.sp .6
1182.RS 4n
1183Controls whether extended attributes are enabled for this file system. The default value is \fBon\fR.
1184.RE
1185
1186.sp
1187.ne 2
1188.mk
1189.na
1190\fB\fBzoned\fR=\fBon\fR | \fBoff\fR\fR
1191.ad
1192.sp .6
1193.RS 4n
4da4a9e1 1194Controls whether the dataset is managed from a non-global zone. Zones are a Solaris feature and are not relevant on Linux. The default value is \fBoff\fR.
058ac9ba
BB
1195.RE
1196
1197.sp
1198.LP
1199The following three properties cannot be changed after the file system is created, and therefore, should be set when the file system is created. If the properties are not set with the \fBzfs create\fR or \fBzpool create\fR commands, these properties are inherited from the parent dataset. If the parent dataset lacks these properties due to having been created prior to these features being supported, the new file system will have the default values for these properties.
1200.sp
1201.ne 2
1202.mk
1203.na
1204\fB\fBcasesensitivity\fR=\fBsensitive\fR | \fBinsensitive\fR | \fBmixed\fR\fR
1205.ad
1206.sp .6
1207.RS 4n
1208Indicates whether the file name matching algorithm used by the file system should be case-sensitive, case-insensitive, or allow a combination of both styles of matching. The default value for the \fBcasesensitivity\fR property is \fBsensitive\fR. Traditionally, UNIX and POSIX file systems have case-sensitive file names.
1209.sp
1210The \fBmixed\fR value for the \fBcasesensitivity\fR property indicates that the file system can support requests for both case-sensitive and case-insensitive matching behavior. Currently, case-insensitive matching behavior on a file system that supports mixed behavior is limited to the Solaris CIFS server product. For more information about the \fBmixed\fR value behavior, see the \fISolaris ZFS Administration Guide\fR.
1211.RE
1212
1213.sp
1214.ne 2
1215.mk
1216.na
1217\fB\fBnormalization\fR = \fBnone\fR | \fBformC\fR | \fBformD\fR | \fBformKC\fR | \fBformKD\fR\fR
1218.ad
1219.sp .6
1220.RS 4n
1221Indicates whether the file system should perform a \fBunicode\fR normalization of file names whenever two file names are compared, and which normalization algorithm should be used. File names are always stored unmodified, names are normalized as part of any comparison process. If this property is set to a legal value other than \fBnone\fR, and the \fButf8only\fR property was left unspecified, the \fButf8only\fR property is automatically set to \fBon\fR. The default value of the \fBnormalization\fR property is \fBnone\fR. This property cannot be changed after the file system is created.
1222.RE
1223
1224.sp
1225.ne 2
1226.mk
1227.na
1228\fB\fButf8only\fR=\fBon\fR | \fBoff\fR\fR
1229.ad
1230.sp .6
1231.RS 4n
1232Indicates whether the file system should reject file names that include characters that are not present in the \fBUTF-8\fR character code set. If this property is explicitly set to \fBoff\fR, the normalization property must either not be explicitly set or be set to \fBnone\fR. The default value for the \fButf8only\fR property is \fBoff\fR. This property cannot be changed after the file system is created.
1233.RE
1234
1235.sp
1236.LP
1237The \fBcasesensitivity\fR, \fBnormalization\fR, and \fButf8only\fR properties are also new permissions that can be assigned to non-privileged users by using the \fBZFS\fR delegated administration feature.
1238.SS "Temporary Mount Point Properties"
1239.sp
1240.LP
2d1b7b0b 1241When a file system is mounted, either through \fBmount\fR(8) for legacy mounts or the \fBzfs mount\fR command for normal file systems, its mount options are set according to its properties. The correlation between properties and mount options is as follows:
058ac9ba
BB
1242.sp
1243.in +2
1244.nf
1245 PROPERTY MOUNT OPTION
1246 devices devices/nodevices
1247 exec exec/noexec
1248 readonly ro/rw
1249 setuid setuid/nosetuid
1250 xattr xattr/noxattr
1251.fi
1252.in -2
1253.sp
1254
1255.sp
1256.LP
1257In addition, these options can be set on a per-mount basis using the \fB-o\fR option, without affecting the property that is stored on disk. The values specified on the command line override the values stored in the dataset. The \fB-nosuid\fR option is an alias for \fBnodevices,nosetuid\fR. These properties are reported as "temporary" by the \fBzfs get\fR command. If the properties are changed while the dataset is mounted, the new setting overrides any temporary settings.
1258.SS "User Properties"
1259.sp
1260.LP
1261In addition to the standard native properties, \fBZFS\fR supports arbitrary user properties. User properties have no effect on \fBZFS\fR behavior, but applications or administrators can use them to annotate datasets (file systems, volumes, and snapshots).
1262.sp
1263.LP
1264User property names must contain a colon (\fB:\fR) character to distinguish them from native properties. They may contain lowercase letters, numbers, and the following punctuation characters: colon (\fB:\fR), dash (\fB-\fR), period (\fB\&.\fR), and underscore (\fB_\fR). The expected convention is that the property name is divided into two portions such as \fImodule\fR\fB:\fR\fIproperty\fR, but this namespace is not enforced by \fBZFS\fR. User property names can be at most 256 characters, and cannot begin with a dash (\fB-\fR).
1265.sp
1266.LP
4da4a9e1 1267When making programmatic use of user properties, it is strongly suggested to use a reversed \fBDNS\fR domain name for the \fImodule\fR component of property names to reduce the chance that two independently-developed packages use the same property name for different purposes. For example, property names beginning with \fBcom.sun\fR. are reserved for use by Oracle Corporation (which acquired Sun Microsystems).
058ac9ba
BB
1268.sp
1269.LP
1270The values of user properties are arbitrary strings, are always inherited, and are never validated. All of the commands that operate on properties (\fBzfs list\fR, \fBzfs get\fR, \fBzfs set\fR, and so forth) can be used to manipulate both native properties and user properties. Use the \fBzfs inherit\fR command to clear a user property . If the property is not defined in any parent dataset, it is removed entirely. Property values are limited to 1024 characters.
4da4a9e1 1271.SS "ZFS Volumes as Swap"
058ac9ba
BB
1272.sp
1273.LP
52768784
BB
1274\fBZFS\fR volumes may be used as Linux swap devices. After creating the volume
1275with the \fBzfs create\fR command set up and enable the swap area using the
1276\fBmkswap\fR(8) and \fBswapon\fR(8) commands. Do not swap to a file on a
1277\fBZFS\fR file system. A \fBZFS\fR swap file configuration is not supported.
058ac9ba
BB
1278.SH SUBCOMMANDS
1279.sp
1280.LP
1281All subcommands that modify state are logged persistently to the pool in their original form.
1282.sp
1283.ne 2
1284.mk
1285.na
1286\fB\fBzfs ?\fR\fR
1287.ad
1288.sp .6
1289.RS 4n
1290Displays a help message.
1291.RE
1292
1293.sp
1294.ne 2
1295.mk
1296.na
1297\fB\fBzfs create\fR [\fB-p\fR] [\fB-o\fR \fIproperty\fR=\fIvalue\fR] ... \fIfilesystem\fR\fR
1298.ad
1299.sp .6
1300.RS 4n
1301Creates a new \fBZFS\fR file system. The file system is automatically mounted according to the \fBmountpoint\fR property inherited from the parent.
1302.sp
1303.ne 2
1304.mk
1305.na
1306\fB\fB-p\fR\fR
1307.ad
1308.sp .6
1309.RS 4n
1310Creates all the non-existing parent datasets. Datasets created in this manner are automatically mounted according to the \fBmountpoint\fR property inherited from their parent. Any property specified on the command line using the \fB-o\fR option is ignored. If the target filesystem already exists, the operation completes successfully.
1311.RE
1312
1313.sp
1314.ne 2
1315.mk
1316.na
1317\fB\fB-o\fR \fIproperty\fR=\fIvalue\fR\fR
1318.ad
1319.sp .6
1320.RS 4n
1321Sets the specified property as if the command \fBzfs set\fR \fIproperty\fR=\fIvalue\fR was invoked at the same time the dataset was created. Any editable \fBZFS\fR property can also be set at creation time. Multiple \fB-o\fR options can be specified. An error results if the same property is specified in multiple \fB-o\fR options.
1322.RE
1323
1324.RE
1325
1326.sp
1327.ne 2
1328.mk
1329.na
1330\fB\fBzfs create\fR [\fB-ps\fR] [\fB-b\fR \fIblocksize\fR] [\fB-o\fR \fIproperty\fR=\fIvalue\fR] ... \fB-V\fR \fIsize\fR \fIvolume\fR\fR
1331.ad
1332.sp .6
1333.RS 4n
1fe2e237 1334Creates a volume of the given size. The volume is exported as a block device in \fB/dev/zvol/\fR\fIpath\fR, where \fIpath\fR is the name of the volume in the \fBZFS\fR namespace. The size represents the logical size as exported by the device. By default, a reservation of equal size is created.
058ac9ba
BB
1335.sp
1336\fIsize\fR is automatically rounded up to the nearest 128 Kbytes to ensure that the volume has an integral number of blocks regardless of \fIblocksize\fR.
1337.sp
1338.ne 2
1339.mk
1340.na
1341\fB\fB-p\fR\fR
1342.ad
1343.sp .6
1344.RS 4n
1345Creates all the non-existing parent datasets. Datasets created in this manner are automatically mounted according to the \fBmountpoint\fR property inherited from their parent. Any property specified on the command line using the \fB-o\fR option is ignored. If the target filesystem already exists, the operation completes successfully.
1346.RE
1347
1348.sp
1349.ne 2
1350.mk
1351.na
1352\fB\fB-s\fR\fR
1353.ad
1354.sp .6
1355.RS 4n
1356Creates a sparse volume with no reservation. See \fBvolsize\fR in the Native Properties section for more information about sparse volumes.
1357.RE
1358
1359.sp
1360.ne 2
1361.mk
1362.na
1363\fB\fB-o\fR \fIproperty\fR=\fIvalue\fR\fR
1364.ad
1365.sp .6
1366.RS 4n
1367Sets the specified property as if the \fBzfs set\fR \fIproperty\fR=\fIvalue\fR command was invoked at the same time the dataset was created. Any editable \fBZFS\fR property can also be set at creation time. Multiple \fB-o\fR options can be specified. An error results if the same property is specified in multiple \fB-o\fR options.
1368.RE
1369
1370.sp
1371.ne 2
1372.mk
1373.na
1374\fB\fB-b\fR \fIblocksize\fR\fR
1375.ad
1376.sp .6
1377.RS 4n
1378Equivalent to \fB-o\fR \fBvolblocksize\fR=\fIblocksize\fR. If this option is specified in conjunction with \fB-o\fR \fBvolblocksize\fR, the resulting behavior is undefined.
1379.RE
1380
1381.RE
1382
1383.sp
1384.ne 2
1385.mk
1386.na
330d06f9 1387\fBzfs destroy\fR [\fB-fnpRrv\fR] \fIfilesystem\fR|\fIvolume\fR
058ac9ba
BB
1388.ad
1389.sp .6
1390.RS 4n
1391Destroys the given dataset. By default, the command unshares any file systems that are currently shared, unmounts any file systems that are currently mounted, and refuses to destroy a dataset that has active dependents (children or clones).
1392.sp
1393.ne 2
1394.mk
1395.na
1396\fB\fB-r\fR\fR
1397.ad
1398.sp .6
1399.RS 4n
1400Recursively destroy all children.
1401.RE
1402
1403.sp
1404.ne 2
1405.mk
1406.na
1407\fB\fB-R\fR\fR
1408.ad
1409.sp .6
1410.RS 4n
1411Recursively destroy all dependents, including cloned file systems outside the target hierarchy.
1412.RE
1413
1414.sp
1415.ne 2
1416.mk
1417.na
1418\fB\fB-f\fR\fR
1419.ad
1420.sp .6
1421.RS 4n
1422Force an unmount of any file systems using the \fBunmount -f\fR command. This option has no effect on non-file systems or unmounted file systems.
1423.RE
1424
330d06f9
MA
1425.sp
1426.ne 2
1427.na
1428\fB\fB-n\fR\fR
1429.ad
1430.sp .6
1431.RS 4n
1432Do a dry-run ("No-op") deletion. No data will be deleted. This is
1433useful in conjunction with the \fB-v\fR or \fB-p\fR flags to determine what
1434data would be deleted.
1435.RE
1436
1437.sp
1438.ne 2
1439.na
1440\fB\fB-p\fR\fR
1441.ad
1442.sp .6
1443.RS 4n
1444Print machine-parsable verbose information about the deleted data.
1445.RE
1446
1447.sp
1448.ne 2
1449.na
1450\fB\fB-v\fR\fR
1451.ad
1452.sp .6
1453.RS 4n
1454Print verbose information about the deleted data.
1455.RE
1456.sp
1457
f5fc4aca 1458Extreme care should be taken when applying either the \fB-r\fR or the \fB-R\fR options, as they can destroy large portions of a pool and cause unexpected behavior for mounted file systems in use.
058ac9ba
BB
1459.RE
1460
1461.sp
1462.ne 2
1463.mk
1464.na
330d06f9 1465\fBzfs destroy\fR [\fB-dnpRrv\fR] \fIfilesystem\fR|\fIvolume\fR@\fIsnap\fR[%\fIsnap\fR][,...]
058ac9ba
BB
1466.ad
1467.sp .6
1468.RS 4n
330d06f9
MA
1469The given snapshots are destroyed immediately if and only if the \fBzfs destroy\fR command without the \fB-d\fR option would have destroyed it. Such immediate destruction would occur, for example, if the snapshot had no clones and the user-initiated reference count were zero.
1470.sp
1471If a snapshot does not qualify for immediate destruction, it is marked for deferred destruction. In this state, it exists as a usable, visible snapshot until both of the preconditions listed above are met, at which point it is destroyed.
1472.sp
1473An inclusive range of snapshots may be specified by separating the
1474first and last snapshots with a percent sign.
1475The first and/or last snapshots may be left blank, in which case the
1476filesystem's oldest or newest snapshot will be implied.
058ac9ba 1477.sp
330d06f9
MA
1478Multiple snapshots
1479(or ranges of snapshots) of the same filesystem or volume may be specified
1480in a comma-separated list of snapshots.
1481Only the snapshot's short name (the
1482part after the \fB@\fR) should be specified when using a range or
1483comma-separated list to identify multiple snapshots.
058ac9ba
BB
1484.sp
1485.ne 2
1486.mk
1487.na
1488\fB\fB-d\fR\fR
1489.ad
1490.sp .6
1491.RS 4n
1492Defer snapshot deletion.
1493.RE
1494
1495.sp
1496.ne 2
1497.mk
1498.na
1499\fB\fB-r\fR\fR
1500.ad
1501.sp .6
1502.RS 4n
3b204150 1503Destroy (or mark for deferred destruction) all snapshots with this name in descendent file systems.
058ac9ba
BB
1504.RE
1505
1506.sp
1507.ne 2
1508.mk
1509.na
1510\fB\fB-R\fR\fR
1511.ad
1512.sp .6
1513.RS 4n
13fe0198
MA
1514Recursively destroy all clones of these snapshots, including the clones,
1515snapshots, and children. If this flag is specified, the \fB-d\fR flag will
1516have no effect.
058ac9ba
BB
1517.RE
1518
330d06f9
MA
1519.sp
1520.ne 2
1521.na
1522\fB\fB-n\fR\fR
1523.ad
1524.sp .6
1525.RS 4n
1526Do a dry-run ("No-op") deletion. No data will be deleted. This is
1527useful in conjunction with the \fB-v\fR or \fB-p\fR flags to determine what
1528data would be deleted.
1529.RE
1530
1531.sp
1532.ne 2
1533.na
1534\fB\fB-p\fR\fR
1535.ad
1536.sp .6
1537.RS 4n
1538Print machine-parsable verbose information about the deleted data.
1539.RE
1540
1541.sp
1542.ne 2
1543.na
1544\fB\fB-v\fR\fR
1545.ad
1546.sp .6
1547.RS 4n
1548Print verbose information about the deleted data.
1549.RE
1550
1551.sp
13fe0198 1552Extreme care should be taken when applying either the \fB-r\fR or the \fB-R\fR
330d06f9
MA
1553options, as they can destroy large portions of a pool and cause unexpected
1554behavior for mounted file systems in use.
1555.RE
1556
058ac9ba
BB
1557.RE
1558
1559.sp
1560.ne 2
1561.mk
1562.na
6f1ffb06 1563\fB\fBzfs snapshot\fR [\fB-r\fR] [\fB-o\fR \fIproperty\fR=\fIvalue\fR] ... \fIfilesystem@snapname\fR|\fIvolume@snapname\fR\fR ...
058ac9ba
BB
1564.ad
1565.sp .6
1566.RS 4n
6f1ffb06 1567Creates snapshots with the given names. All previous modifications by successful system calls to the file system are part of the snapshots. Snapshots are taken atomically, so that all snapshots correspond to the same moment in time. See the "Snapshots" section for details.
058ac9ba
BB
1568.sp
1569.ne 2
1570.mk
1571.na
1572\fB\fB-r\fR\fR
1573.ad
1574.sp .6
1575.RS 4n
6f1ffb06 1576Recursively create snapshots of all descendent datasets.
058ac9ba
BB
1577.RE
1578
1579.sp
1580.ne 2
1581.mk
1582.na
1583\fB\fB-o\fR \fIproperty\fR=\fIvalue\fR\fR
1584.ad
1585.sp .6
1586.RS 4n
1587Sets the specified property; see \fBzfs create\fR for details.
1588.RE
1589
1590.RE
1591
1592.sp
1593.ne 2
1594.mk
1595.na
1596\fB\fBzfs rollback\fR [\fB-rRf\fR] \fIsnapshot\fR\fR
1597.ad
1598.sp .6
1599.RS 4n
1600Roll back the given dataset to a previous snapshot. When a dataset is rolled back, all data that has changed since the snapshot is discarded, and the dataset reverts to the state at the time of the snapshot. By default, the command refuses to roll back to a snapshot other than the most recent one. In order to do so, all intermediate snapshots must be destroyed by specifying the \fB-r\fR option.
1601.sp
1602The \fB-rR\fR options do not recursively destroy the child snapshots of a recursive snapshot. Only the top-level recursive snapshot is destroyed by either of these options. To completely roll back a recursive snapshot, you must rollback the individual child snapshots.
1603.sp
1604.ne 2
1605.mk
1606.na
1607\fB\fB-r\fR\fR
1608.ad
1609.sp .6
1610.RS 4n
1611Recursively destroy any snapshots more recent than the one specified.
1612.RE
1613
1614.sp
1615.ne 2
1616.mk
1617.na
1618\fB\fB-R\fR\fR
1619.ad
1620.sp .6
1621.RS 4n
1622Recursively destroy any more recent snapshots, as well as any clones of those snapshots.
1623.RE
1624
1625.sp
1626.ne 2
1627.mk
1628.na
1629\fB\fB-f\fR\fR
1630.ad
1631.sp .6
1632.RS 4n
1633Used with the \fB-R\fR option to force an unmount of any clone file systems that are to be destroyed.
1634.RE
1635
1636.RE
1637
1638.sp
1639.ne 2
1640.mk
1641.na
1642\fB\fBzfs clone\fR [\fB-p\fR] [\fB-o\fR \fIproperty\fR=\fIvalue\fR] ... \fIsnapshot\fR \fIfilesystem\fR|\fIvolume\fR\fR
1643.ad
1644.sp .6
1645.RS 4n
1646Creates a clone of the given snapshot. See the "Clones" section for details. The target dataset can be located anywhere in the \fBZFS\fR hierarchy, and is created as the same type as the original.
1647.sp
1648.ne 2
1649.mk
1650.na
1651\fB\fB-p\fR\fR
1652.ad
1653.sp .6
1654.RS 4n
1655Creates all the non-existing parent datasets. Datasets created in this manner are automatically mounted according to the \fBmountpoint\fR property inherited from their parent. If the target filesystem or volume already exists, the operation completes successfully.
1656.RE
1657
1658.sp
1659.ne 2
1660.mk
1661.na
1662\fB\fB-o\fR \fIproperty\fR=\fIvalue\fR\fR
1663.ad
1664.sp .6
1665.RS 4n
1666Sets the specified property; see \fBzfs create\fR for details.
1667.RE
1668
1669.RE
1670
1671.sp
1672.ne 2
1673.mk
1674.na
1675\fB\fBzfs promote\fR \fIclone-filesystem\fR\fR
1676.ad
1677.sp .6
1678.RS 4n
1679Promotes a clone file system to no longer be dependent on its "origin" snapshot. This makes it possible to destroy the file system that the clone was created from. The clone parent-child dependency relationship is reversed, so that the origin file system becomes a clone of the specified file system.
1680.sp
1681The snapshot that was cloned, and any snapshots previous to this snapshot, are now owned by the promoted clone. The space they use moves from the origin file system to the promoted clone, so enough space must be available to accommodate these snapshots. No new space is consumed by this operation, but the space accounting is adjusted. The promoted clone must not have any conflicting snapshot names of its own. The \fBrename\fR subcommand can be used to rename any conflicting snapshots.
1682.RE
1683
1684.sp
1685.ne 2
1686.mk
1687.na
db49968e 1688\fB\fBzfs rename\fR [\fB-f\fR] \fIfilesystem\fR|\fIvolume\fR|\fIsnapshot\fR\fR
058ac9ba
BB
1689.ad
1690.br
1691.na
1692\fB\fIfilesystem\fR|\fIvolume\fR|\fIsnapshot\fR\fR
1693.ad
1694.br
1695.na
db49968e 1696\fB\fBzfs rename\fR [\fB-fp\fR] \fIfilesystem\fR|\fIvolume\fR \fIfilesystem\fR|\fIvolume\fR\fR
058ac9ba
BB
1697.ad
1698.sp .6
1699.RS 4n
1700Renames the given dataset. The new target can be located anywhere in the \fBZFS\fR hierarchy, with the exception of snapshots. Snapshots can only be renamed within the parent file system or volume. When renaming a snapshot, the parent file system of the snapshot does not need to be specified as part of the second argument. Renamed file systems can inherit new mount points, in which case they are unmounted and remounted at the new mount point.
1701.sp
1702.ne 2
1703.mk
1704.na
1705\fB\fB-p\fR\fR
1706.ad
1707.sp .6
1708.RS 4n
1709Creates all the nonexistent parent datasets. Datasets created in this manner are automatically mounted according to the \fBmountpoint\fR property inherited from their parent.
1710.RE
1711
db49968e
ES
1712.sp
1713.ne 2
1714.na
1715\fB\fB-f\fR\fR
1716.ad
1717.sp .6
1718.RS 4n
1719Force unmount any filesystems that need to be unmounted in the process.
1720.RE
1721
058ac9ba
BB
1722.RE
1723
1724.sp
1725.ne 2
1726.mk
1727.na
1728\fB\fBzfs rename\fR \fB-r\fR \fIsnapshot\fR \fIsnapshot\fR\fR
1729.ad
1730.sp .6
1731.RS 4n
1732Recursively rename the snapshots of all descendent datasets. Snapshots are the only dataset that can be renamed recursively.
1733.RE
1734
1735.sp
1736.ne 2
1737.mk
1738.na
157c9b69 1739\fB\fBzfs\fR \fBlist\fR [\fB-r\fR|\fB-d\fR \fIdepth\fR] [\fB-H\fR] [\fB-o\fR \fIproperty\fR[,\fI\&...\fR]] [ \fB-t\fR \fItype\fR[,\fI\&...\fR]] [ \fB-s\fR \fIproperty\fR ] ... [ \fB-S\fR \fIproperty\fR ] ... [\fIfilesystem\fR|\fIvolume\fR|\fIsnapshot\fR] ...\fR
058ac9ba
BB
1740.ad
1741.sp .6
1742.RS 4n
1743Lists the property information for the given datasets in tabular form. If specified, you can list property information by the absolute pathname or the relative pathname. By default, all file systems and volumes are displayed. Snapshots are displayed if the \fBlistsnaps\fR property is \fBon\fR (the default is \fBoff\fR) . The following fields are displayed, \fBname,used,available,referenced,mountpoint\fR.
1744.sp
1745.ne 2
1746.mk
1747.na
1748\fB\fB-H\fR\fR
1749.ad
1750.sp .6
1751.RS 4n
1752Used for scripting mode. Do not print headers and separate fields by a single tab instead of arbitrary white space.
1753.RE
1754
1755.sp
1756.ne 2
1757.mk
1758.na
1759\fB\fB-r\fR\fR
1760.ad
1761.sp .6
1762.RS 4n
1763Recursively display any children of the dataset on the command line.
1764.RE
1765
1766.sp
1767.ne 2
1768.mk
1769.na
1770\fB\fB-d\fR \fIdepth\fR\fR
1771.ad
1772.sp .6
1773.RS 4n
1774Recursively display any children of the dataset, limiting the recursion to \fIdepth\fR. A depth of \fB1\fR will display only the dataset and its direct children.
1775.RE
1776
1777.sp
1778.ne 2
1779.mk
1780.na
1781\fB\fB-o\fR \fIproperty\fR\fR
1782.ad
1783.sp .6
1784.RS 4n
1785A comma-separated list of properties to display. The property must be:
1786.RS +4
1787.TP
1788.ie t \(bu
1789.el o
1790One of the properties described in the "Native Properties" section
1791.RE
1792.RS +4
1793.TP
1794.ie t \(bu
1795.el o
1796A user property
1797.RE
1798.RS +4
1799.TP
1800.ie t \(bu
1801.el o
1802The value \fBname\fR to display the dataset name
1803.RE
1804.RS +4
1805.TP
1806.ie t \(bu
1807.el o
1808The value \fBspace\fR to display space usage properties on file systems and volumes. This is a shortcut for specifying \fB-o name,avail,used,usedsnap,usedds,usedrefreserv,usedchild\fR \fB-t filesystem,volume\fR syntax.
1809.RE
1810.RE
1811
1812.sp
1813.ne 2
1814.mk
1815.na
1816\fB\fB-s\fR \fIproperty\fR\fR
1817.ad
1818.sp .6
1819.RS 4n
1820A property for sorting the output by column in ascending order based on the value of the property. The property must be one of the properties described in the "Properties" section, or the special value \fBname\fR to sort by the dataset name. Multiple properties can be specified at one time using multiple \fB-s\fR property options. Multiple \fB-s\fR options are evaluated from left to right in decreasing order of importance.
1821.sp
1822The following is a list of sorting criteria:
1823.RS +4
1824.TP
1825.ie t \(bu
1826.el o
1827Numeric types sort in numeric order.
1828.RE
1829.RS +4
1830.TP
1831.ie t \(bu
1832.el o
1833String types sort in alphabetical order.
1834.RE
1835.RS +4
1836.TP
1837.ie t \(bu
1838.el o
1839Types inappropriate for a row sort that row to the literal bottom, regardless of the specified ordering.
1840.RE
1841.RS +4
1842.TP
1843.ie t \(bu
1844.el o
1845If no sorting options are specified the existing behavior of \fBzfs list\fR is preserved.
1846.RE
1847.RE
1848
1849.sp
1850.ne 2
1851.mk
1852.na
1853\fB\fB-S\fR \fIproperty\fR\fR
1854.ad
1855.sp .6
1856.RS 4n
1857Same as the \fB-s\fR option, but sorts by property in descending order.
1858.RE
1859
1860.sp
1861.ne 2
1862.mk
1863.na
1864\fB\fB-t\fR \fItype\fR\fR
1865.ad
1866.sp .6
1867.RS 4n
157c9b69 1868A comma-separated list of types to display, where \fItype\fR is one of \fBfilesystem\fR, \fBsnapshot\fR, \fBsnap\fR, \fBvolume\fR, or \fBall\fR. For example, specifying \fB-t snapshot\fR displays only snapshots.
058ac9ba
BB
1869.RE
1870
1871.RE
1872
1873.sp
1874.ne 2
1875.mk
1876.na
1877\fB\fBzfs set\fR \fIproperty\fR=\fIvalue\fR \fIfilesystem\fR|\fIvolume\fR|\fIsnapshot\fR ...\fR
1878.ad
1879.sp .6
1880.RS 4n
1881Sets the property to the given value for each dataset. Only some properties can be edited. See the "Properties" section for more information on what properties can be set and acceptable values. Numeric values can be specified as exact values, or in a human-readable form with a suffix of \fBB\fR, \fBK\fR, \fBM\fR, \fBG\fR, \fBT\fR, \fBP\fR, \fBE\fR, \fBZ\fR (for bytes, kilobytes, megabytes, gigabytes, terabytes, petabytes, exabytes, or zettabytes, respectively). User properties can be set on snapshots. For more information, see the "User Properties" section.
1882.RE
1883
1884.sp
1885.ne 2
1886.mk
1887.na
e346ec25 1888\fB\fBzfs get\fR [\fB-r\fR|\fB-d\fR \fIdepth\fR] [\fB-Hp\fR] [\fB-o\fR \fIfield\fR[,...] [\fB-t\fR \fItype\fR[,...]] [\fB-s\fR \fIsource\fR[,...] "\fIall\fR" | \fIproperty\fR[,...] \fIfilesystem\fR|\fIvolume\fR|\fIsnapshot\fR ...\fR
058ac9ba
BB
1889.ad
1890.sp .6
1891.RS 4n
1892Displays properties for the given datasets. If no datasets are specified, then the command displays properties for all datasets on the system. For each property, the following columns are displayed:
1893.sp
1894.in +2
1895.nf
1896 name Dataset name
1897 property Property name
1898 value Property value
1899 source Property source. Can either be local, default,
1900 temporary, inherited, or none (-).
1901.fi
1902.in -2
1903.sp
1904
1905All columns are displayed by default, though this can be controlled by using the \fB-o\fR option. This command takes a comma-separated list of properties as described in the "Native Properties" and "User Properties" sections.
1906.sp
1907The special value \fBall\fR can be used to display all properties that apply to the given dataset's type (filesystem, volume, or snapshot).
1908.sp
1909.ne 2
1910.mk
1911.na
1912\fB\fB-r\fR\fR
1913.ad
1914.sp .6
1915.RS 4n
1916Recursively display properties for any children.
1917.RE
1918
1919.sp
1920.ne 2
1921.mk
1922.na
1923\fB\fB-d\fR \fIdepth\fR\fR
1924.ad
1925.sp .6
1926.RS 4n
1927Recursively display any children of the dataset, limiting the recursion to \fIdepth\fR. A depth of \fB1\fR will display only the dataset and its direct children.
1928.RE
1929
1930.sp
1931.ne 2
1932.mk
1933.na
1934\fB\fB-H\fR\fR
1935.ad
1936.sp .6
1937.RS 4n
1938Display output in a form more easily parsed by scripts. Any headers are omitted, and fields are explicitly separated by a single tab instead of an arbitrary amount of space.
1939.RE
1940
1941.sp
1942.ne 2
1943.mk
1944.na
1945\fB\fB-o\fR \fIfield\fR\fR
1946.ad
1947.sp .6
1948.RS 4n
1949A comma-separated list of columns to display. \fBname,property,value,source\fR is the default value.
1950.RE
1951
1952.sp
1953.ne 2
1954.mk
1955.na
1956\fB\fB-s\fR \fIsource\fR\fR
1957.ad
1958.sp .6
1959.RS 4n
1960A comma-separated list of sources to display. Those properties coming from a source other than those in this list are ignored. Each source must be one of the following: \fBlocal,default,inherited,temporary,none\fR. The default value is all sources.
1961.RE
1962
1963.sp
1964.ne 2
1965.mk
1966.na
1967\fB\fB-p\fR\fR
1968.ad
1969.sp .6
1970.RS 4n
1971Display numbers in parseable (exact) values.
1972.RE
1973
1974.RE
1975
1976.sp
1977.ne 2
1978.mk
1979.na
1980\fB\fBzfs inherit\fR [\fB-r\fR] \fIproperty\fR \fIfilesystem\fR|\fIvolume\fR|\fIsnapshot\fR ...\fR
1981.ad
1982.sp .6
1983.RS 4n
1984Clears the specified property, causing it to be inherited from an ancestor. If no ancestor has the property set, then the default value is used. See the "Properties" section for a listing of default values, and details on which properties can be inherited.
1985.sp
1986.ne 2
1987.mk
1988.na
1989\fB\fB-r\fR\fR
1990.ad
1991.sp .6
1992.RS 4n
1993Recursively inherit the given property for all children.
1994.RE
1995
1996.RE
1997
1998.sp
1999.ne 2
2000.mk
2001.na
2002\fB\fBzfs upgrade\fR [\fB-v\fR]\fR
2003.ad
2004.sp .6
2005.RS 4n
2006Displays a list of file systems that are not the most recent version.
2007.RE
2008
2009.sp
2010.ne 2
2011.mk
2012.na
2013\fB\fBzfs upgrade\fR [\fB-r\fR] [\fB-V\fR \fIversion\fR] [\fB-a\fR | \fIfilesystem\fR]\fR
2014.ad
2015.sp .6
2016.RS 4n
2017Upgrades file systems to a new on-disk version. Once this is done, the file systems will no longer be accessible on systems running older versions of the software. \fBzfs send\fR streams generated from new snapshots of these file systems cannot be accessed on systems running older versions of the software.
2018.sp
2d1b7b0b 2019In general, the file system version is independent of the pool version. See \fBzpool\fR(8) for information on the \fBzpool upgrade\fR command.
058ac9ba
BB
2020.sp
2021In some cases, the file system version and the pool version are interrelated and the pool version must be upgraded before the file system version can be upgraded.
2022.sp
2023.ne 2
2024.mk
2025.na
2026\fB\fB-a\fR\fR
2027.ad
2028.sp .6
2029.RS 4n
2030Upgrade all file systems on all imported pools.
2031.RE
2032
2033.sp
2034.ne 2
2035.mk
2036.na
2037\fB\fIfilesystem\fR\fR
2038.ad
2039.sp .6
2040.RS 4n
2041Upgrade the specified file system.
2042.RE
2043
2044.sp
2045.ne 2
2046.mk
2047.na
2048\fB\fB-r\fR\fR
2049.ad
2050.sp .6
2051.RS 4n
2052Upgrade the specified file system and all descendent file systems
2053.RE
2054
2055.sp
2056.ne 2
2057.mk
2058.na
2059\fB\fB-V\fR \fIversion\fR\fR
2060.ad
2061.sp .6
2062.RS 4n
2063Upgrade to the specified \fIversion\fR. If the \fB-V\fR flag is not specified, this command upgrades to the most recent version. This option can only be used to increase the version number, and only up to the most recent version supported by this software.
2064.RE
2065
2066.RE
2067
2068.sp
2069.ne 2
2070.mk
2071.na
5990da81
YP
2072\fBzfs\fR \fBuserspace\fR [\fB-Hinp\fR] [\fB-o\fR \fIfield\fR[,...]]
2073[\fB-s\fR \fIfield\fR] ...
2074[\fB-S\fR \fIfield\fR] ...
2075[\fB-t\fR \fItype\fR[,...]] \fIfilesystem\fR|\fIsnapshot\fR
058ac9ba
BB
2076.ad
2077.sp .6
2078.RS 4n
5990da81
YP
2079Displays space consumed by, and quotas on, each user in the specified
2080filesystem or snapshot. This corresponds to the \fBuserused@\fR\fIuser\fR and
2081\fBuserquota@\fR\fIuser\fR properties.
058ac9ba
BB
2082.sp
2083.ne 2
2084.mk
2085.na
2086\fB\fB-n\fR\fR
2087.ad
2088.sp .6
2089.RS 4n
2090Print numeric ID instead of user/group name.
2091.RE
2092
2093.sp
2094.ne 2
2095.mk
2096.na
2097\fB\fB-H\fR\fR
2098.ad
2099.sp .6
2100.RS 4n
2101Do not print headers, use tab-delimited output.
2102.RE
2103
2104.sp
2105.ne 2
2106.mk
2107.na
2108\fB\fB-p\fR\fR
2109.ad
2110.sp .6
2111.RS 4n
5990da81 2112Use exact (parsable) numeric output.
058ac9ba
BB
2113.RE
2114
2115.sp
2116.ne 2
2117.mk
2118.na
2119\fB\fB-o\fR \fIfield\fR[,...]\fR
2120.ad
2121.sp .6
2122.RS 4n
5990da81
YP
2123Display only the specified fields from the following
2124set: \fBtype, name, used, quota\fR. The default is to display all fields.
058ac9ba
BB
2125.RE
2126
2127.sp
2128.ne 2
2129.mk
2130.na
2131\fB\fB-s\fR \fIfield\fR\fR
2132.ad
2133.sp .6
2134.RS 4n
5990da81
YP
2135Sort output by this field. The \fIs\fR and \fIS\fR flags may be specified
2136multiple times to sort first by one field, then by another. The default is
2137\fB-s type\fR \fB-s name\fR.
058ac9ba
BB
2138.RE
2139
2140.sp
2141.ne 2
2142.mk
2143.na
2144\fB\fB-S\fR \fIfield\fR\fR
2145.ad
2146.sp .6
2147.RS 4n
2148Sort by this field in reverse order. See \fB-s\fR.
2149.RE
2150
2151.sp
2152.ne 2
2153.mk
2154.na
2155\fB\fB-t\fR \fItype\fR[,...]\fR
2156.ad
2157.sp .6
2158.RS 4n
5990da81
YP
2159Print only the specified types from the following
2160set: \fBall, posixuser, smbuser, posixgroup, smbgroup\fR. The default
2161is \fB-t posixuser,smbuser\fR. The default can be changed to include group
2162types.
058ac9ba
BB
2163.RE
2164
2165.sp
2166.ne 2
2167.mk
2168.na
2169\fB\fB-i\fR\fR
2170.ad
2171.sp .6
2172.RS 4n
5990da81
YP
2173Translate SID to POSIX ID. The POSIX ID may be ephemeral if no mapping exists.
2174Normal POSIX interfaces (for example, \fBstat\fR(2), \fBls\fR \fB-l\fR) perform
2175this translation, so the \fB-i\fR option allows the output from \fBzfs
2176userspace\fR to be compared directly with those utilities. However, \fB-i\fR
2177may lead to confusion if some files were created by an SMB user before a
2178SMB-to-POSIX name mapping was established. In such a case, some files will be owned
2179by the SMB entity and some by the POSIX entity. However, the \fB-i\fR option
2180will report that the POSIX entity has the total usage and quota for both.
058ac9ba
BB
2181.RE
2182
2183.RE
2184
2185.sp
2186.ne 2
2187.mk
2188.na
5990da81
YP
2189\fBzfs\fR \fBgroupspace\fR [\fB-Hinp\fR] [\fB-o\fR \fIfield\fR[,...]]
2190[\fB-s\fR \fIfield\fR] ...
2191[\fB-S\fR \fIfield\fR] ...
2192[\fB-t\fR \fItype\fR[,...]] \fIfilesystem\fR|\fIsnapshot\fR
058ac9ba
BB
2193.ad
2194.sp .6
2195.RS 4n
5990da81
YP
2196Displays space consumed by, and quotas on, each group in the specified
2197filesystem or snapshot. This subcommand is identical to \fBzfs userspace\fR,
2198except that the default types to display are \fB-t posixgroup,smbgroup\fR.
058ac9ba
BB
2199.RE
2200
2201.sp
2202.ne 2
2203.mk
2204.na
2205\fB\fBzfs mount\fR\fR
2206.ad
2207.sp .6
2208.RS 4n
2209Displays all \fBZFS\fR file systems currently mounted.
2210.RE
2211
2212.sp
2213.ne 2
2214.mk
2215.na
2216\fB\fBzfs mount\fR [\fB-vO\fR] [\fB-o\fR \fIoptions\fR] \fB-a\fR | \fIfilesystem\fR\fR
2217.ad
2218.sp .6
2219.RS 4n
2220Mounts \fBZFS\fR file systems. Invoked automatically as part of the boot process.
2221.sp
2222.ne 2
2223.mk
2224.na
2225\fB\fB-o\fR \fIoptions\fR\fR
2226.ad
2227.sp .6
2228.RS 4n
5990da81
YP
2229An optional, comma-separated list of mount options to use temporarily for the
2230duration of the mount. See the "Temporary Mount Point Properties" section for
2231details.
058ac9ba
BB
2232.RE
2233
2234.sp
2235.ne 2
2236.mk
2237.na
2238\fB\fB-O\fR\fR
2239.ad
2240.sp .6
2241.RS 4n
2d1b7b0b 2242Perform an overlay mount. See \fBmount\fR(8) for more information.
058ac9ba
BB
2243.RE
2244
2245.sp
2246.ne 2
2247.mk
2248.na
2249\fB\fB-v\fR\fR
2250.ad
2251.sp .6
2252.RS 4n
2253Report mount progress.
2254.RE
2255
2256.sp
2257.ne 2
2258.mk
2259.na
2260\fB\fB-a\fR\fR
2261.ad
2262.sp .6
2263.RS 4n
5990da81
YP
2264Mount all available \fBZFS\fR file systems. Invoked automatically as part of
2265the boot process.
058ac9ba
BB
2266.RE
2267
2268.sp
2269.ne 2
2270.mk
2271.na
2272\fB\fIfilesystem\fR\fR
2273.ad
2274.sp .6
2275.RS 4n
2276Mount the specified filesystem.
2277.RE
2278
2279.RE
2280
2281.sp
2282.ne 2
2283.mk
2284.na
2285\fB\fBzfs unmount\fR [\fB-f\fR] \fB-a\fR | \fIfilesystem\fR|\fImountpoint\fR\fR
2286.ad
2287.sp .6
2288.RS 4n
2289Unmounts currently mounted \fBZFS\fR file systems. Invoked automatically as part of the shutdown process.
2290.sp
2291.ne 2
2292.mk
2293.na
2294\fB\fB-f\fR\fR
2295.ad
2296.sp .6
2297.RS 4n
2298Forcefully unmount the file system, even if it is currently in use.
2299.RE
2300
2301.sp
2302.ne 2
2303.mk
2304.na
2305\fB\fB-a\fR\fR
2306.ad
2307.sp .6
2308.RS 4n
2309Unmount all available \fBZFS\fR file systems. Invoked automatically as part of the boot process.
2310.RE
2311
2312.sp
2313.ne 2
2314.mk
2315.na
2316\fB\fIfilesystem\fR|\fImountpoint\fR\fR
2317.ad
2318.sp .6
2319.RS 4n
2320Unmount the specified filesystem. The command can also be given a path to a \fBZFS\fR file system mount point on the system.
2321.RE
2322
2323.RE
2324
2325.sp
2326.ne 2
2327.mk
2328.na
2329\fB\fBzfs share\fR \fB-a\fR | \fIfilesystem\fR\fR
2330.ad
2331.sp .6
2332.RS 4n
2333Shares available \fBZFS\fR file systems.
2334.sp
2335.ne 2
2336.mk
2337.na
2338\fB\fB-a\fR\fR
2339.ad
2340.sp .6
2341.RS 4n
2342Share all available \fBZFS\fR file systems. Invoked automatically as part of the boot process.
2343.RE
2344
2345.sp
2346.ne 2
2347.mk
2348.na
2349\fB\fIfilesystem\fR\fR
2350.ad
2351.sp .6
2352.RS 4n
2353Share the specified filesystem according to the \fBsharenfs\fR and \fBsharesmb\fR properties. File systems are shared when the \fBsharenfs\fR or \fBsharesmb\fR property is set.
2354.RE
2355
2356.RE
2357
2358.sp
2359.ne 2
2360.mk
2361.na
2362\fB\fBzfs unshare\fR \fB-a\fR | \fIfilesystem\fR|\fImountpoint\fR\fR
2363.ad
2364.sp .6
2365.RS 4n
2366Unshares currently shared \fBZFS\fR file systems. This is invoked automatically as part of the shutdown process.
2367.sp
2368.ne 2
2369.mk
2370.na
2371\fB\fB-a\fR\fR
2372.ad
2373.sp .6
2374.RS 4n
2375Unshare all available \fBZFS\fR file systems. Invoked automatically as part of the boot process.
2376.RE
2377
2378.sp
2379.ne 2
2380.mk
2381.na
2382\fB\fIfilesystem\fR|\fImountpoint\fR\fR
2383.ad
2384.sp .6
2385.RS 4n
2386Unshare the specified filesystem. The command can also be given a path to a \fBZFS\fR file system shared on the system.
2387.RE
2388
2389.RE
2390
2391.sp
2392.ne 2
2393.mk
2394.na
9566fb1a 2395\fBzfs send\fR [\fB-DnPpRv\fR] [\fB-\fR[\fBiI\fR] \fIsnapshot\fR] \fIsnapshot\fR
058ac9ba
BB
2396.ad
2397.sp .6
2398.RS 4n
2399Creates a stream representation of the second \fIsnapshot\fR, which is written to standard output. The output can be redirected to a file or to a different system (for example, using \fBssh\fR(1). By default, a full stream is generated.
2400.sp
2401.ne 2
2402.mk
2403.na
2404\fB\fB-i\fR \fIsnapshot\fR\fR
2405.ad
2406.sp .6
2407.RS 4n
2408Generate an incremental stream from the first \fIsnapshot\fR to the second \fIsnapshot\fR. The incremental source (the first \fIsnapshot\fR) can be specified as the last component of the snapshot name (for example, the part after the \fB@\fR), and it is assumed to be from the same file system as the second \fIsnapshot\fR.
2409.sp
2410If the destination is a clone, the source may be the origin snapshot, which must be fully specified (for example, \fBpool/fs@origin\fR, not just \fB@origin\fR).
2411.RE
2412
2413.sp
2414.ne 2
2415.mk
2416.na
2417\fB\fB-I\fR \fIsnapshot\fR\fR
2418.ad
2419.sp .6
2420.RS 4n
2421Generate a stream package that sends all intermediary snapshots from the first snapshot to the second snapshot. For example, \fB-I @a fs@d\fR is similar to \fB-i @a fs@b; -i @b fs@c; -i @c fs@d\fR. The incremental source snapshot may be specified as with the \fB-i\fR option.
2422.RE
2423
e0f86c98
BB
2424.sp
2425.ne 2
2426.mk
2427.na
9566fb1a 2428\fB\fB-R\fR\fR
e0f86c98
BB
2429.ad
2430.sp .6
2431.RS 4n
9566fb1a
SB
2432Generate a replication stream package, which will replicate the specified filesystem, and all descendent file systems, up to the named snapshot. When received, all properties, snapshots, descendent file systems, and clones are preserved.
2433.sp
2434If the \fB-i\fR or \fB-I\fR flags are used in conjunction with the \fB-R\fR flag, an incremental replication stream is generated. The current values of properties, and current snapshot and file system names are set when the stream is received. If the \fB-F\fR flag is specified when this stream is received, snapshots and file systems that do not exist on the sending side are destroyed.
e0f86c98
BB
2435.RE
2436
058ac9ba
BB
2437.sp
2438.ne 2
2439.mk
2440.na
9566fb1a 2441\fB\fB-D\fR\fR
058ac9ba
BB
2442.ad
2443.sp .6
2444.RS 4n
9566fb1a 2445Generate a deduplicated stream. Blocks which would have been sent multiple times in the send stream will only be sent once. The receiving system must also support this feature to recieve a deduplicated stream. This flag can be used regardless of the dataset's dedup property, but performance will be much better if the filesystem uses a dedup-capable checksum (eg. sha256).
058ac9ba
BB
2446.RE
2447
2448.sp
2449.ne 2
2450.mk
2451.na
9566fb1a
SB
2452\fB\fB-p\fR\fR
2453.ad
2454.sp .6
2455.RS 4n
2456Include the dataset's properties in the stream. This flag is implicit when -R is specified. The receiving system must also support this feature.
2457.RE
2458
2459.sp
2460.ne 2
2461.na
2462\fB\fB-n\fR\fR
058ac9ba
BB
2463.ad
2464.sp .6
2465.RS 4n
9566fb1a
SB
2466Do a dry-run ("No-op") send. Do not generate any actual send data. This is
2467useful in conjunction with the \fB-v\fR or \fB-P\fR flags to determine what
2468data will be sent.
2469.RE
2470
e0f86c98 2471.sp
9566fb1a
SB
2472.ne 2
2473.na
2474\fB\fB-P\fR\fR
2475.ad
2476.sp .6
2477.RS 4n
2478Print machine-parsable verbose information about the stream package generated.
e0f86c98
BB
2479.RE
2480
2481.sp
2482.ne 2
2483.mk
2484.na
9566fb1a 2485\fB\fB-v\fR\fR
e0f86c98
BB
2486.ad
2487.sp .6
2488.RS 4n
9566fb1a
SB
2489Print verbose information about the stream package generated. This information
2490includes a per-second report of how much data has been sent.
058ac9ba
BB
2491.RE
2492
2493The format of the stream is committed. You will be able to receive your streams on future versions of \fBZFS\fR.
2494.RE
2495
2496.sp
2497.ne 2
2498.mk
2499.na
2500\fB\fBzfs receive\fR [\fB-vnFu\fR] \fIfilesystem\fR|\fIvolume\fR|\fIsnapshot\fR\fR
2501.ad
2502.br
2503.na
bb8b81ec 2504\fB\fBzfs receive\fR [\fB-vnFu\fR] [\fB-d\fR|\fB-e\fR] \fIfilesystem\fR\fR
058ac9ba
BB
2505.ad
2506.sp .6
2507.RS 4n
2508Creates a snapshot whose contents are as specified in the stream provided on standard input. If a full stream is received, then a new file system is created as well. Streams are created using the \fBzfs send\fR subcommand, which by default creates a full stream. \fBzfs recv\fR can be used as an alias for \fBzfs receive\fR.
2509.sp
2510If an incremental stream is received, then the destination file system must already exist, and its most recent snapshot must match the incremental stream's source. For \fBzvols\fR, the destination device link is destroyed and recreated, which means the \fBzvol\fR cannot be accessed during the \fBreceive\fR operation.
2511.sp
2512When a snapshot replication package stream that is generated by using the \fBzfs send\fR \fB-R\fR command is received, any snapshots that do not exist on the sending location are destroyed by using the \fBzfs destroy\fR \fB-d\fR command.
2513.sp
bb8b81ec 2514The name of the snapshot (and file system, if a full stream is received) that this subcommand creates depends on the argument type and the use of the \fB-d\fR or \fB-e\fR options.
058ac9ba 2515.sp
bb8b81ec
BB
2516If the argument is a snapshot name, the specified \fIsnapshot\fR is created. If the argument is a file system or volume name, a snapshot with the same name as the sent snapshot is created within the specified \fIfilesystem\fR or \fIvolume\fR. If neither of the \fB-d\fR or \fB-e\fR options are specified, the provided target snapshot name is used exactly as provided.
2517.sp
2518The \fB-d\fR and \fB-e\fR options cause the file system name of the target snapshot to be determined by appending a portion of the sent snapshot's name to the specified target \fIfilesystem\fR. If the \fB-d\fR option is specified, all but the first element of the sent snapshot's file system path (usually the pool name) is used and any required intermediate file systems within the specified one are created. If the \fB-e\fR option is specified, then only the last element of the sent snapshot's file system name (i.e. the name of the source file system itself) is used as the target file system name.
058ac9ba
BB
2519.sp
2520.ne 2
2521.mk
2522.na
2523\fB\fB-d\fR\fR
2524.ad
2525.sp .6
2526.RS 4n
bb8b81ec
BB
2527Discard the first element of the sent snapshot's file system name, using the remaining elements to determine the name of the target file system for the new snapshot as described in the paragraph above.
2528.RE
2529
2530.sp
2531.ne 2
2532.na
2533\fB\fB-e\fR\fR
2534.ad
2535.sp .6
2536.RS 4n
2537Discard all but the last element of the sent snapshot's file system name, using that element to determine the name of the target file system for the new snapshot as described in the paragraph above.
058ac9ba
BB
2538.RE
2539
2540.sp
2541.ne 2
2542.mk
2543.na
2544\fB\fB-u\fR\fR
2545.ad
2546.sp .6
2547.RS 4n
2548File system that is associated with the received stream is not mounted.
2549.RE
2550
330d06f9
MA
2551.sp
2552.ne 2
2553.na
058ac9ba
BB
2554\fB\fB-v\fR\fR
2555.ad
2556.sp .6
2557.RS 4n
2558Print verbose information about the stream and the time required to perform the receive operation.
2559.RE
2560
2561.sp
2562.ne 2
2563.mk
2564.na
2565\fB\fB-n\fR\fR
2566.ad
2567.sp .6
2568.RS 4n
2569Do not actually receive the stream. This can be useful in conjunction with the \fB-v\fR option to verify the name the receive operation would use.
2570.RE
2571
2572.sp
2573.ne 2
2574.mk
2575.na
2576\fB\fB-F\fR\fR
2577.ad
2578.sp .6
2579.RS 4n
2580Force a rollback of the file system to the most recent snapshot before performing the receive operation. If receiving an incremental replication stream (for example, one generated by \fBzfs send -R -[iI]\fR), destroy snapshots and file systems that do not exist on the sending side.
2581.RE
2582
2583.RE
2584
2585.sp
2586.ne 2
2587.mk
2588.na
2589\fB\fBzfs allow\fR \fIfilesystem\fR | \fIvolume\fR\fR
2590.ad
2591.sp .6
2592.RS 4n
2593Displays permissions that have been delegated on the specified filesystem or volume. See the other forms of \fBzfs allow\fR for more information.
2594.RE
2595
2596.sp
2597.ne 2
2598.mk
2599.na
2600\fB\fBzfs allow\fR [\fB-ldug\fR] "\fIeveryone\fR"|\fIuser\fR|\fIgroup\fR[,...] \fIperm\fR|@\fIsetname\fR[,...] \fIfilesystem\fR| \fIvolume\fR\fR
2601.ad
2602.br
2603.na
2604\fB\fBzfs allow\fR [\fB-ld\fR] \fB-e\fR \fIperm\fR|@\fIsetname\fR[,...] \fIfilesystem\fR | \fIvolume\fR\fR
2605.ad
2606.sp .6
2607.RS 4n
2608Delegates \fBZFS\fR administration permission for the file systems to non-privileged users.
2609.sp
2610.ne 2
2611.mk
2612.na
2613\fB[\fB-ug\fR] "\fIeveryone\fR"|\fIuser\fR|\fIgroup\fR[,...]\fR
2614.ad
2615.sp .6
2616.RS 4n
2617Specifies to whom the permissions are delegated. Multiple entities can be specified as a comma-separated list. If neither of the \fB-ug\fR options are specified, then the argument is interpreted preferentially as the keyword "everyone", then as a user name, and lastly as a group name. To specify a user or group named "everyone", use the \fB-u\fR or \fB-g\fR options. To specify a group with the same name as a user, use the \fB-g\fR options.
2618.RE
2619
2620.sp
2621.ne 2
2622.mk
2623.na
2624\fB[\fB-e\fR] \fIperm\fR|@\fIsetname\fR[,...]\fR
2625.ad
2626.sp .6
2627.RS 4n
2628Specifies that the permissions be delegated to "everyone." Multiple permissions may be specified as a comma-separated list. Permission names are the same as \fBZFS\fR subcommand and property names. See the property list below. Property set names, which begin with an at sign (\fB@\fR) , may be specified. See the \fB-s\fR form below for details.
2629.RE
2630
2631.sp
2632.ne 2
2633.mk
2634.na
2635\fB[\fB-ld\fR] \fIfilesystem\fR|\fIvolume\fR\fR
2636.ad
2637.sp .6
2638.RS 4n
2639Specifies where the permissions are delegated. If neither of the \fB-ld\fR options are specified, or both are, then the permissions are allowed for the file system or volume, and all of its descendents. If only the \fB-l\fR option is used, then is allowed "locally" only for the specified file system. If only the \fB-d\fR option is used, then is allowed only for the descendent file systems.
2640.RE
2641
2642.RE
2643
2644.sp
2645.LP
2646Permissions are generally the ability to use a \fBZFS\fR subcommand or change a \fBZFS\fR property. The following permissions are available:
2647.sp
2648.in +2
2649.nf
2650NAME TYPE NOTES
2651allow subcommand Must also have the permission that is being
2652 allowed
2653clone subcommand Must also have the 'create' ability and 'mount'
2654 ability in the origin file system
2655create subcommand Must also have the 'mount' ability
2656destroy subcommand Must also have the 'mount' ability
0677cb6f
RL
2657diff subcommand Allows lookup of paths within a dataset
2658 given an object number, and the ability to
2659 create snapshots necessary to 'zfs diff'.
058ac9ba
BB
2660mount subcommand Allows mount/umount of ZFS datasets
2661promote subcommand Must also have the 'mount'
2662 and 'promote' ability in the origin file system
2663receive subcommand Must also have the 'mount' and 'create' ability
2664rename subcommand Must also have the 'mount' and 'create'
2665 ability in the new parent
2666rollback subcommand Must also have the 'mount' ability
2667send subcommand
2668share subcommand Allows sharing file systems over NFS or SMB
2669 protocols
2670snapshot subcommand Must also have the 'mount' ability
2671groupquota other Allows accessing any groupquota@... property
2672groupused other Allows reading any groupused@... property
2673userprop other Allows changing any user property
2674userquota other Allows accessing any userquota@... property
2675userused other Allows reading any userused@... property
2676
2677aclinherit property
2678aclmode property
2679atime property
2680canmount property
2681casesensitivity property
2682checksum property
2683compression property
2684copies property
c8f25918 2685dedup property
058ac9ba
BB
2686devices property
2687exec property
c8f25918
KA
2688logbias property
2689mlslabel property
058ac9ba
BB
2690mountpoint property
2691nbmand property
2692normalization property
2693primarycache property
2694quota property
2695readonly property
2696recordsize property
2697refquota property
2698refreservation property
2699reservation property
2700secondarycache property
2701setuid property
2702shareiscsi property
2703sharenfs property
2704sharesmb property
2705snapdir property
2706utf8only property
2707version property
2708volblocksize property
2709volsize property
2710vscan property
2711xattr property
2712zoned property
2713.fi
2714.in -2
2715.sp
2716
2717.sp
2718.ne 2
2719.mk
2720.na
2721\fB\fBzfs allow\fR \fB-c\fR \fIperm\fR|@\fIsetname\fR[,...] \fIfilesystem\fR|\fIvolume\fR\fR
2722.ad
2723.sp .6
2724.RS 4n
2725Sets "create time" permissions. These permissions are granted (locally) to the creator of any newly-created descendent file system.
2726.RE
2727
2728.sp
2729.ne 2
2730.mk
2731.na
2732\fB\fBzfs allow\fR \fB-s\fR @\fIsetname\fR \fIperm\fR|@\fIsetname\fR[,...] \fIfilesystem\fR|\fIvolume\fR\fR
2733.ad
2734.sp .6
2735.RS 4n
2736Defines or adds permissions to a permission set. The set can be used by other \fBzfs allow\fR commands for the specified file system and its descendents. Sets are evaluated dynamically, so changes to a set are immediately reflected. Permission sets follow the same naming restrictions as ZFS file systems, but the name must begin with an "at sign" (\fB@\fR), and can be no more than 64 characters long.
2737.RE
2738
2739.sp
2740.ne 2
2741.mk
2742.na
2743\fB\fBzfs unallow\fR [\fB-rldug\fR] "\fIeveryone\fR"|\fIuser\fR|\fIgroup\fR[,...] [\fIperm\fR|@\fIsetname\fR[, ...]] \fIfilesystem\fR|\fIvolume\fR\fR
2744.ad
2745.br
2746.na
2747\fB\fBzfs unallow\fR [\fB-rld\fR] \fB-e\fR [\fIperm\fR|@\fIsetname\fR [,...]] \fIfilesystem\fR|\fIvolume\fR\fR
2748.ad
2749.br
2750.na
2751\fB\fBzfs unallow\fR [\fB-r\fR] \fB-c\fR [\fIperm\fR|@\fIsetname\fR[,...]]\fR
2752.ad
2753.br
2754.na
2755\fB\fIfilesystem\fR|\fIvolume\fR\fR
2756.ad
2757.sp .6
2758.RS 4n
2759Removes permissions that were granted with the \fBzfs allow\fR command. No permissions are explicitly denied, so other permissions granted are still in effect. For example, if the permission is granted by an ancestor. If no permissions are specified, then all permissions for the specified \fIuser\fR, \fIgroup\fR, or \fIeveryone\fR are removed. Specifying "everyone" (or using the \fB-e\fR option) only removes the permissions that were granted to "everyone", not all permissions for every user and group. See the \fBzfs allow\fR command for a description of the \fB-ldugec\fR options.
2760.sp
2761.ne 2
2762.mk
2763.na
2764\fB\fB-r\fR\fR
2765.ad
2766.sp .6
2767.RS 4n
2768Recursively remove the permissions from this file system and all descendents.
2769.RE
2770
2771.RE
2772
2773.sp
2774.ne 2
2775.mk
2776.na
2777\fB\fBzfs unallow\fR [\fB-r\fR] \fB-s\fR @\fIsetname\fR [\fIperm\fR|@\fIsetname\fR[,...]]\fR
2778.ad
2779.br
2780.na
2781\fB\fIfilesystem\fR|\fIvolume\fR\fR
2782.ad
2783.sp .6
2784.RS 4n
2785Removes permissions from a permission set. If no permissions are specified, then all permissions are removed, thus removing the set entirely.
2786.RE
2787
2788.sp
2789.ne 2
2790.mk
2791.na
2792\fB\fBzfs hold\fR [\fB-r\fR] \fItag\fR \fIsnapshot\fR...\fR
2793.ad
2794.sp .6
2795.RS 4n
2796Adds a single reference, named with the \fItag\fR argument, to the specified snapshot or snapshots. Each snapshot has its own tag namespace, and tags must be unique within that space.
2797.sp
2798If a hold exists on a snapshot, attempts to destroy that snapshot by using the \fBzfs destroy\fR command return \fBEBUSY\fR.
2799.sp
2800.ne 2
2801.mk
2802.na
2803\fB\fB-r\fR\fR
2804.ad
2805.sp .6
2806.RS 4n
2807Specifies that a hold with the given tag is applied recursively to the snapshots of all descendent file systems.
2808.RE
2809
2810.RE
2811
2812.sp
2813.ne 2
2814.mk
2815.na
2816\fB\fBzfs holds\fR [\fB-r\fR] \fIsnapshot\fR...\fR
2817.ad
2818.sp .6
2819.RS 4n
2820Lists all existing user references for the given snapshot or snapshots.
2821.sp
2822.ne 2
2823.mk
2824.na
2825\fB\fB-r\fR\fR
2826.ad
2827.sp .6
2828.RS 4n
2829Lists the holds that are set on the named descendent snapshots, in addition to listing the holds on the named snapshot.
2830.RE
2831
2832.RE
2833
2834.sp
2835.ne 2
2836.mk
2837.na
2838\fB\fBzfs release\fR [\fB-r\fR] \fItag\fR \fIsnapshot\fR...\fR
2839.ad
2840.sp .6
2841.RS 4n
2842Removes a single reference, named with the \fItag\fR argument, from the specified snapshot or snapshots. The tag must already exist for each snapshot.
2843.sp
2844If a hold exists on a snapshot, attempts to destroy that snapshot by using the \fBzfs destroy\fR command return \fBEBUSY\fR.
2845.sp
2846.ne 2
2847.mk
2848.na
2849\fB\fB-r\fR\fR
2850.ad
2851.sp .6
2852.RS 4n
2853Recursively releases a hold with the given tag on the snapshots of all descendent file systems.
2854.RE
2855
2856.RE
2857
0677cb6f
RL
2858.sp
2859.ne 2
2860.mk
2861.na
2862\fB\fBzfs diff\fR [\fB-FHt\fR] \fIsnapshot\fR \fIsnapshot|filesystem\fR
2863.ad
2864.sp .6
2865.RS 4n
2866Display the difference between a snapshot of a given filesystem and another
2867snapshot of that filesystem from a later time or the current contents of the
2868filesystem. The first column is a character indicating the type of change,
2869the other columns indicate pathname, new pathname (in case of rename), change
2870in link count, and optionally file type and/or change time.
2871
2872The types of change are:
2873.in +2
2874.nf
2875- The path has been removed
2876+ The path has been created
2877M The path has been modified
2878R The path has been renamed
2879.fi
2880.in -2
2881.sp
2882.ne 2
2883.na
2884\fB-F\fR
2885.ad
2886.sp .6
2887.RS 4n
2888Display an indication of the type of file, in a manner similar to the \fB-F\fR
2889option of \fBls\fR(1).
2890.in +2
2891.nf
2892B Block device
2893C Character device
2894/ Directory
2895> Door
2896| Named pipe
2897@ Symbolic link
2898P Event port
2899= Socket
2900F Regular file
2901.fi
2902.in -2
2903.RE
2904.sp
2905.ne 2
2906.na
2907\fB-H\fR
2908.ad
2909.sp .6
2910.RS 4n
2911Give more parseable tab-separated output, without header lines and without arrows.
2912.RE
2913.sp
2914.ne 2
2915.na
2916\fB-t\fR
2917.ad
2918.sp .6
2919.RS 4n
2920Display the path's inode change time as the first column of output.
2921.RE
2922
058ac9ba
BB
2923.SH EXAMPLES
2924.LP
2925\fBExample 1 \fRCreating a ZFS File System Hierarchy
2926.sp
2927.LP
2928The following commands create a file system named \fBpool/home\fR and a file system named \fBpool/home/bob\fR. The mount point \fB/export/home\fR is set for the parent file system, and is automatically inherited by the child file system.
2929
2930.sp
2931.in +2
2932.nf
2933# \fBzfs create pool/home\fR
2934# \fBzfs set mountpoint=/export/home pool/home\fR
2935# \fBzfs create pool/home/bob\fR
2936.fi
2937.in -2
2938.sp
2939
2940.LP
2941\fBExample 2 \fRCreating a ZFS Snapshot
2942.sp
2943.LP
2944The following command creates a snapshot named \fByesterday\fR. This snapshot is mounted on demand in the \fB\&.zfs/snapshot\fR directory at the root of the \fBpool/home/bob\fR file system.
2945
2946.sp
2947.in +2
2948.nf
2949# \fBzfs snapshot pool/home/bob@yesterday\fR
2950.fi
2951.in -2
2952.sp
2953
2954.LP
2955\fBExample 3 \fRCreating and Destroying Multiple Snapshots
2956.sp
2957.LP
2958The following command creates snapshots named \fByesterday\fR of \fBpool/home\fR and all of its descendent file systems. Each snapshot is mounted on demand in the \fB\&.zfs/snapshot\fR directory at the root of its file system. The second command destroys the newly created snapshots.
2959
2960.sp
2961.in +2
2962.nf
2963# \fBzfs snapshot -r pool/home@yesterday\fR
2964# \fBzfs destroy -r pool/home@yesterday\fR
2965.fi
2966.in -2
2967.sp
2968
2969.LP
2970\fBExample 4 \fRDisabling and Enabling File System Compression
2971.sp
2972.LP
2973The following command disables the \fBcompression\fR property for all file systems under \fBpool/home\fR. The next command explicitly enables \fBcompression\fR for \fBpool/home/anne\fR.
2974
2975.sp
2976.in +2
2977.nf
2978# \fBzfs set compression=off pool/home\fR
2979# \fBzfs set compression=on pool/home/anne\fR
2980.fi
2981.in -2
2982.sp
2983
2984.LP
2985\fBExample 5 \fRListing ZFS Datasets
2986.sp
2987.LP
2d1b7b0b 2988The following command lists all active file systems and volumes in the system. Snapshots are displayed if the \fBlistsnaps\fR property is \fBon\fR. The default is \fBoff\fR. See \fBzpool\fR(8) for more information on pool properties.
058ac9ba
BB
2989
2990.sp
2991.in +2
2992.nf
2993# \fBzfs list\fR
2994 NAME USED AVAIL REFER MOUNTPOINT
2995 pool 450K 457G 18K /pool
2996 pool/home 315K 457G 21K /export/home
2997 pool/home/anne 18K 457G 18K /export/home/anne
2998 pool/home/bob 276K 457G 276K /export/home/bob
2999.fi
3000.in -2
3001.sp
3002
3003.LP
3004\fBExample 6 \fRSetting a Quota on a ZFS File System
3005.sp
3006.LP
3007The following command sets a quota of 50 Gbytes for \fBpool/home/bob\fR.
3008
3009.sp
3010.in +2
3011.nf
3012# \fBzfs set quota=50G pool/home/bob\fR
3013.fi
3014.in -2
3015.sp
3016
3017.LP
3018\fBExample 7 \fRListing ZFS Properties
3019.sp
3020.LP
3021The following command lists all properties for \fBpool/home/bob\fR.
3022
3023.sp
3024.in +2
3025.nf
3026# \fBzfs get all pool/home/bob\fR
3027NAME PROPERTY VALUE SOURCE
3028pool/home/bob type filesystem -
3029pool/home/bob creation Tue Jul 21 15:53 2009 -
3030pool/home/bob used 21K -
3031pool/home/bob available 20.0G -
3032pool/home/bob referenced 21K -
3033pool/home/bob compressratio 1.00x -
3034pool/home/bob mounted yes -
3035pool/home/bob quota 20G local
3036pool/home/bob reservation none default
3037pool/home/bob recordsize 128K default
3038pool/home/bob mountpoint /pool/home/bob default
3039pool/home/bob sharenfs off default
3040pool/home/bob checksum on default
3041pool/home/bob compression on local
3042pool/home/bob atime on default
3043pool/home/bob devices on default
3044pool/home/bob exec on default
3045pool/home/bob setuid on default
3046pool/home/bob readonly off default
3047pool/home/bob zoned off default
3048pool/home/bob snapdir hidden default
3049pool/home/bob aclmode groupmask default
3050pool/home/bob aclinherit restricted default
3051pool/home/bob canmount on default
3052pool/home/bob shareiscsi off default
3053pool/home/bob xattr on default
3054pool/home/bob copies 1 default
3055pool/home/bob version 4 -
3056pool/home/bob utf8only off -
3057pool/home/bob normalization none -
3058pool/home/bob casesensitivity sensitive -
3059pool/home/bob vscan off default
3060pool/home/bob nbmand off default
3061pool/home/bob sharesmb off default
3062pool/home/bob refquota none default
3063pool/home/bob refreservation none default
3064pool/home/bob primarycache all default
3065pool/home/bob secondarycache all default
3066pool/home/bob usedbysnapshots 0 -
3067pool/home/bob usedbydataset 21K -
3068pool/home/bob usedbychildren 0 -
3069pool/home/bob usedbyrefreservation 0 -
c8f25918
KA
3070pool/home/bob logbias latency default
3071pool/home/bob dedup off default
3072pool/home/bob mlslabel none default
058ac9ba
BB
3073.fi
3074.in -2
3075.sp
3076
3077.sp
3078.LP
3079The following command gets a single property value.
3080
3081.sp
3082.in +2
3083.nf
3084# \fBzfs get -H -o value compression pool/home/bob\fR
3085on
3086.fi
3087.in -2
3088.sp
3089
3090.sp
3091.LP
3092The following command lists all properties with local settings for \fBpool/home/bob\fR.
3093
3094.sp
3095.in +2
3096.nf
3097# \fBzfs get -r -s local -o name,property,value all pool/home/bob\fR
3098NAME PROPERTY VALUE
3099pool/home/bob quota 20G
3100pool/home/bob compression on
3101.fi
3102.in -2
3103.sp
3104
3105.LP
3106\fBExample 8 \fRRolling Back a ZFS File System
3107.sp
3108.LP
3109The following command reverts the contents of \fBpool/home/anne\fR to the snapshot named \fByesterday\fR, deleting all intermediate snapshots.
3110
3111.sp
3112.in +2
3113.nf
3114# \fBzfs rollback -r pool/home/anne@yesterday\fR
3115.fi
3116.in -2
3117.sp
3118
3119.LP
3120\fBExample 9 \fRCreating a ZFS Clone
3121.sp
3122.LP
3123The following command creates a writable file system whose initial contents are the same as \fBpool/home/bob@yesterday\fR.
3124
3125.sp
3126.in +2
3127.nf
3128# \fBzfs clone pool/home/bob@yesterday pool/clone\fR
3129.fi
3130.in -2
3131.sp
3132
3133.LP
3134\fBExample 10 \fRPromoting a ZFS Clone
3135.sp
3136.LP
3137The following commands illustrate how to test out changes to a file system, and then replace the original file system with the changed one, using clones, clone promotion, and renaming:
3138
3139.sp
3140.in +2
3141.nf
3142# \fBzfs create pool/project/production\fR
3143 populate /pool/project/production with data
3144# \fBzfs snapshot pool/project/production@today\fR
3145# \fBzfs clone pool/project/production@today pool/project/beta\fR
3146make changes to /pool/project/beta and test them
3147# \fBzfs promote pool/project/beta\fR
3148# \fBzfs rename pool/project/production pool/project/legacy\fR
3149# \fBzfs rename pool/project/beta pool/project/production\fR
3150once the legacy version is no longer needed, it can be destroyed
3151# \fBzfs destroy pool/project/legacy\fR
3152.fi
3153.in -2
3154.sp
3155
3156.LP
3157\fBExample 11 \fRInheriting ZFS Properties
3158.sp
3159.LP
3160The following command causes \fBpool/home/bob\fR and \fBpool/home/anne\fR to inherit the \fBchecksum\fR property from their parent.
3161
3162.sp
3163.in +2
3164.nf
3165# \fBzfs inherit checksum pool/home/bob pool/home/anne\fR
3166.fi
3167.in -2
3168.sp
3169
3170.LP
3171\fBExample 12 \fRRemotely Replicating ZFS Data
3172.sp
3173.LP
3174The following commands send a full stream and then an incremental stream to a remote machine, restoring them into \fBpoolB/received/fs@a\fRand \fBpoolB/received/fs@b\fR, respectively. \fBpoolB\fR must contain the file system \fBpoolB/received\fR, and must not initially contain \fBpoolB/received/fs\fR.
3175
3176.sp
3177.in +2
3178.nf
3179# \fBzfs send pool/fs@a | \e\fR
3180 \fBssh host zfs receive poolB/received/fs@a\fR
3181# \fBzfs send -i a pool/fs@b | ssh host \e\fR
3182 \fBzfs receive poolB/received/fs\fR
3183.fi
3184.in -2
3185.sp
3186
3187.LP
3188\fBExample 13 \fRUsing the \fBzfs receive\fR \fB-d\fR Option
3189.sp
3190.LP
3191The following command sends a full stream of \fBpoolA/fsA/fsB@snap\fR to a remote machine, receiving it into \fBpoolB/received/fsA/fsB@snap\fR. The \fBfsA/fsB@snap\fR portion of the received snapshot's name is determined from the name of the sent snapshot. \fBpoolB\fR must contain the file system \fBpoolB/received\fR. If \fBpoolB/received/fsA\fR does not exist, it is created as an empty file system.
3192
3193.sp
3194.in +2
3195.nf
3196# \fBzfs send poolA/fsA/fsB@snap | \e
3197 ssh host zfs receive -d poolB/received\fR
3198.fi
3199.in -2
3200.sp
3201
3202.LP
3203\fBExample 14 \fRSetting User Properties
3204.sp
3205.LP
3206The following example sets the user-defined \fBcom.example:department\fR property for a dataset.
3207
3208.sp
3209.in +2
3210.nf
3211# \fBzfs set com.example:department=12345 tank/accounting\fR
3212.fi
3213.in -2
3214.sp
3215
3216.LP
3217\fBExample 15 \fRCreating a ZFS Volume as an iSCSI Target Device
3218.sp
3219.LP
3220The following example shows how to create a \fBZFS\fR volume as an \fBiSCSI\fR target.
3221
3222.sp
3223.in +2
3224.nf
3225# \fBzfs create -V 2g pool/volumes/vol1\fR
3226# \fBzfs set shareiscsi=on pool/volumes/vol1\fR
3227# \fBiscsitadm list target\fR
3228Target: pool/volumes/vol1
3229 iSCSI Name:
3230 iqn.1986-03.com.sun:02:7b4b02a6-3277-eb1b-e686-a24762c52a8c
3231 Connections: 0
3232.fi
3233.in -2
3234.sp
3235
3236.sp
3237.LP
3238After the \fBiSCSI\fR target is created, set up the \fBiSCSI\fR initiator. For more information about the Solaris \fBiSCSI\fR initiator, see \fBiscsitadm\fR(1M).
3239.LP
3240\fBExample 16 \fRPerforming a Rolling Snapshot
3241.sp
3242.LP
3243The following example shows how to maintain a history of snapshots with a consistent naming scheme. To keep a week's worth of snapshots, the user destroys the oldest snapshot, renames the remaining snapshots, and then creates a new snapshot, as follows:
3244
3245.sp
3246.in +2
3247.nf
3248# \fBzfs destroy -r pool/users@7daysago\fR
3249# \fBzfs rename -r pool/users@6daysago @7daysago\fR
3250# \fBzfs rename -r pool/users@5daysago @6daysago\fR
b5d8c5fb
NG
3251# \fBzfs rename -r pool/users@4daysago @5daysago\fR
3252# \fBzfs rename -r pool/users@3daysago @4daysago\fR
3253# \fBzfs rename -r pool/users@2daysago @3daysago\fR
058ac9ba
BB
3254# \fBzfs rename -r pool/users@yesterday @2daysago\fR
3255# \fBzfs rename -r pool/users@today @yesterday\fR
3256# \fBzfs snapshot -r pool/users@today\fR
3257.fi
3258.in -2
3259.sp
3260
3261.LP
3262\fBExample 17 \fRSetting \fBsharenfs\fR Property Options on a ZFS File System
3263.sp
3264.LP
3265The following commands show how to set \fBsharenfs\fR property options to enable \fBrw\fR access for a set of \fBIP\fR addresses and to enable root access for system \fBneo\fR on the \fBtank/home\fR file system.
3266
3267.sp
3268.in +2
3269.nf
0677cb6f 3270# \fBzfs set sharenfs='rw=@123.123.0.0/16,root=neo' tank/home\fR
058ac9ba
BB
3271.fi
3272.in -2
3273.sp
3274
3275.sp
3276.LP
3277If you are using \fBDNS\fR for host name resolution, specify the fully qualified hostname.
3278
3279.LP
3280\fBExample 18 \fRDelegating ZFS Administration Permissions on a ZFS Dataset
3281.sp
3282.LP
3283The following example shows how to set permissions so that user \fBcindys\fR can create, destroy, mount, and take snapshots on \fBtank/cindys\fR. The permissions on \fBtank/cindys\fR are also displayed.
3284
3285.sp
3286.in +2
3287.nf
3288# \fBzfs allow cindys create,destroy,mount,snapshot tank/cindys\fR
3289# \fBzfs allow tank/cindys\fR
3290-------------------------------------------------------------
3291Local+Descendent permissions on (tank/cindys)
3292 user cindys create,destroy,mount,snapshot
3293-------------------------------------------------------------
3294.fi
3295.in -2
3296.sp
3297
3298.sp
3299.LP
3300Because the \fBtank/cindys\fR mount point permission is set to 755 by default, user \fBcindys\fR will be unable to mount file systems under \fBtank/cindys\fR. Set an \fBACL\fR similar to the following syntax to provide mount point access:
3301.sp
3302.in +2
3303.nf
3304# \fBchmod A+user:cindys:add_subdirectory:allow /tank/cindys\fR
3305.fi
3306.in -2
3307.sp
3308
3309.LP
3310\fBExample 19 \fRDelegating Create Time Permissions on a ZFS Dataset
3311.sp
3312.LP
3313The following example shows how to grant anyone in the group \fBstaff\fR to create file systems in \fBtank/users\fR. This syntax also allows staff members to destroy their own file systems, but not destroy anyone else's file system. The permissions on \fBtank/users\fR are also displayed.
3314
3315.sp
3316.in +2
3317.nf
0677cb6f 3318# \fBzfs allow staff create,mount tank/users\fR
058ac9ba
BB
3319# \fBzfs allow -c destroy tank/users\fR
3320# \fBzfs allow tank/users\fR
3321-------------------------------------------------------------
3322Create time permissions on (tank/users)
3323 create,destroy
3324Local+Descendent permissions on (tank/users)
3325 group staff create,mount
3326-------------------------------------------------------------
3327.fi
3328.in -2
3329.sp
3330
3331.LP
3332\fBExample 20 \fRDefining and Granting a Permission Set on a ZFS Dataset
3333.sp
3334.LP
3335The following example shows how to define and grant a permission set on the \fBtank/users\fR file system. The permissions on \fBtank/users\fR are also displayed.
3336
3337.sp
3338.in +2
3339.nf
3340# \fBzfs allow -s @pset create,destroy,snapshot,mount tank/users\fR
3341# \fBzfs allow staff @pset tank/users\fR
3342# \fBzfs allow tank/users\fR
3343-------------------------------------------------------------
3344Permission sets on (tank/users)
3345 @pset create,destroy,mount,snapshot
3346Create time permissions on (tank/users)
3347 create,destroy
3348Local+Descendent permissions on (tank/users)
3349 group staff @pset,create,mount
3350-------------------------------------------------------------
3351.fi
3352.in -2
3353.sp
3354
3355.LP
3356\fBExample 21 \fRDelegating Property Permissions on a ZFS Dataset
3357.sp
3358.LP
3359The following example shows to grant the ability to set quotas and reservations on the \fBusers/home\fR file system. The permissions on \fBusers/home\fR are also displayed.
3360
3361.sp
3362.in +2
3363.nf
3364# \fBzfs allow cindys quota,reservation users/home\fR
3365# \fBzfs allow users/home\fR
3366-------------------------------------------------------------
3367Local+Descendent permissions on (users/home)
3368 user cindys quota,reservation
3369-------------------------------------------------------------
3370cindys% \fBzfs set quota=10G users/home/marks\fR
3371cindys% \fBzfs get quota users/home/marks\fR
3372NAME PROPERTY VALUE SOURCE
3373users/home/marks quota 10G local
3374.fi
3375.in -2
3376.sp
3377
3378.LP
3379\fBExample 22 \fRRemoving ZFS Delegated Permissions on a ZFS Dataset
3380.sp
3381.LP
3382The following example shows how to remove the snapshot permission from the \fBstaff\fR group on the \fBtank/users\fR file system. The permissions on \fBtank/users\fR are also displayed.
3383
3384.sp
3385.in +2
3386.nf
3387# \fBzfs unallow staff snapshot tank/users\fR
3388# \fBzfs allow tank/users\fR
3389-------------------------------------------------------------
3390Permission sets on (tank/users)
3391 @pset create,destroy,mount,snapshot
3392Create time permissions on (tank/users)
3393 create,destroy
3394Local+Descendent permissions on (tank/users)
3395 group staff @pset,create,mount
3396-------------------------------------------------------------
3397.fi
3398.in -2
3399.sp
3400
0677cb6f
RL
3401.LP
3402\fBExample 23\fR Showing the differences between a snapshot and a ZFS Dataset
3403.sp
3404.LP
3405The following example shows how to see what has changed between a prior
3406snapshot of a ZFS Dataset and its current state. The \fB-F\fR option is used
3407to indicate type information for the files affected.
3408
3409.sp
3410.in +2
3411.nf
3412# zfs diff -F tank/test@before tank/test
3413M / /tank/test/
3414M F /tank/test/linked (+1)
3415R F /tank/test/oldname -> /tank/test/newname
3416- F /tank/test/deleted
3417+ F /tank/test/created
3418M F /tank/test/modified
3419.fi
3420.in -2
3421.sp
3422
058ac9ba
BB
3423.SH EXIT STATUS
3424.sp
3425.LP
3426The following exit values are returned:
3427.sp
3428.ne 2
3429.mk
3430.na
3431\fB\fB0\fR\fR
3432.ad
3433.sp .6
3434.RS 4n
3435Successful completion.
3436.RE
3437
3438.sp
3439.ne 2
3440.mk
3441.na
3442\fB\fB1\fR\fR
3443.ad
3444.sp .6
3445.RS 4n
3446An error occurred.
3447.RE
3448
3449.sp
3450.ne 2
3451.mk
3452.na
3453\fB\fB2\fR\fR
3454.ad
3455.sp .6
3456.RS 4n
3457Invalid command line options were specified.
3458.RE
3459
058ac9ba
BB
3460.SH SEE ALSO
3461.sp
3462.LP
4da4a9e1 3463\fBchmod\fR(2), \fBfsync\fR(2), \fBgzip\fR(1), \fBmount\fR(8), \fBssh\fR(1), \fBstat\fR(2), \fBwrite\fR(2), \fBzpool\fR(8)