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1[[chapter_zfs]]
2ZFS on Linux
3------------
4ifdef::wiki[]
5:pve-toplevel:
6endif::wiki[]
7
8ZFS is a combined file system and logical volume manager designed by
9Sun Microsystems. Starting with {pve} 3.4, the native Linux
10kernel port of the ZFS file system is introduced as optional
11file system and also as an additional selection for the root
12file system. There is no need for manually compile ZFS modules - all
13packages are included.
14
15By using ZFS, its possible to achieve maximum enterprise features with
16low budget hardware, but also high performance systems by leveraging
17SSD caching or even SSD only setups. ZFS can replace cost intense
18hardware raid cards by moderate CPU and memory load combined with easy
19management.
20
21.General ZFS advantages
22
23* Easy configuration and management with {pve} GUI and CLI.
24
25* Reliable
26
27* Protection against data corruption
28
29* Data compression on file system level
30
31* Snapshots
32
33* Copy-on-write clone
34
35* Various raid levels: RAID0, RAID1, RAID10, RAIDZ-1, RAIDZ-2 and RAIDZ-3
36
37* Can use SSD for cache
38
39* Self healing
40
41* Continuous integrity checking
42
43* Designed for high storage capacities
44
45* Asynchronous replication over network
46
47* Open Source
48
49* Encryption
50
51* ...
52
53
54Hardware
55~~~~~~~~
56
57ZFS depends heavily on memory, so you need at least 8GB to start. In
58practice, use as much as you can get for your hardware/budget. To prevent
59data corruption, we recommend the use of high quality ECC RAM.
60
61If you use a dedicated cache and/or log disk, you should use an
62enterprise class SSD (e.g. Intel SSD DC S3700 Series). This can
63increase the overall performance significantly.
64
65IMPORTANT: Do not use ZFS on top of a hardware RAID controller which has its
66own cache management. ZFS needs to communicate directly with the disks. An
67HBA adapter or something like an LSI controller flashed in ``IT'' mode is more
68appropriate.
69
70If you are experimenting with an installation of {pve} inside a VM
71(Nested Virtualization), don't use `virtio` for disks of that VM,
72as they are not supported by ZFS. Use IDE or SCSI instead (also works
73with the `virtio` SCSI controller type).
74
75
76Installation as Root File System
77~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
78
79When you install using the {pve} installer, you can choose ZFS for the
80root file system. You need to select the RAID type at installation
81time:
82
83[horizontal]
84RAID0:: Also called ``striping''. The capacity of such volume is the sum
85of the capacities of all disks. But RAID0 does not add any redundancy,
86so the failure of a single drive makes the volume unusable.
87
88RAID1:: Also called ``mirroring''. Data is written identically to all
89disks. This mode requires at least 2 disks with the same size. The
90resulting capacity is that of a single disk.
91
92RAID10:: A combination of RAID0 and RAID1. Requires at least 4 disks.
93
94RAIDZ-1:: A variation on RAID-5, single parity. Requires at least 3 disks.
95
96RAIDZ-2:: A variation on RAID-5, double parity. Requires at least 4 disks.
97
98RAIDZ-3:: A variation on RAID-5, triple parity. Requires at least 5 disks.
99
100The installer automatically partitions the disks, creates a ZFS pool
101called `rpool`, and installs the root file system on the ZFS subvolume
102`rpool/ROOT/pve-1`.
103
104Another subvolume called `rpool/data` is created to store VM
105images. In order to use that with the {pve} tools, the installer
106creates the following configuration entry in `/etc/pve/storage.cfg`:
107
108----
109zfspool: local-zfs
110 pool rpool/data
111 sparse
112 content images,rootdir
113----
114
115After installation, you can view your ZFS pool status using the
116`zpool` command:
117
118----
119# zpool status
120 pool: rpool
121 state: ONLINE
122 scan: none requested
123config:
124
125 NAME STATE READ WRITE CKSUM
126 rpool ONLINE 0 0 0
127 mirror-0 ONLINE 0 0 0
128 sda2 ONLINE 0 0 0
129 sdb2 ONLINE 0 0 0
130 mirror-1 ONLINE 0 0 0
131 sdc ONLINE 0 0 0
132 sdd ONLINE 0 0 0
133
134errors: No known data errors
135----
136
137The `zfs` command is used configure and manage your ZFS file
138systems. The following command lists all file systems after
139installation:
140
141----
142# zfs list
143NAME USED AVAIL REFER MOUNTPOINT
144rpool 4.94G 7.68T 96K /rpool
145rpool/ROOT 702M 7.68T 96K /rpool/ROOT
146rpool/ROOT/pve-1 702M 7.68T 702M /
147rpool/data 96K 7.68T 96K /rpool/data
148rpool/swap 4.25G 7.69T 64K -
149----
150
151
152[[sysadmin_zfs_raid_considerations]]
153ZFS RAID Level Considerations
154~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
155
156There are a few factors to take into consideration when choosing the layout of
157a ZFS pool. The basic building block of a ZFS pool is the virtual device, or
158`vdev`. All vdevs in a pool are used equally and the data is striped among them
159(RAID0). Check the `zpool(8)` manpage for more details on vdevs.
160
161[[sysadmin_zfs_raid_performance]]
162Performance
163^^^^^^^^^^^
164
165Each `vdev` type has different performance behaviors. The two
166parameters of interest are the IOPS (Input/Output Operations per Second) and
167the bandwidth with which data can be written or read.
168
169A 'mirror' vdev (RAID1) will approximately behave like a single disk in regards
170to both parameters when writing data. When reading data if will behave like the
171number of disks in the mirror.
172
173A common situation is to have 4 disks. When setting it up as 2 mirror vdevs
174(RAID10) the pool will have the write characteristics as two single disks in
175regard of IOPS and bandwidth. For read operations it will resemble 4 single
176disks.
177
178A 'RAIDZ' of any redundancy level will approximately behave like a single disk
179in regard of IOPS with a lot of bandwidth. How much bandwidth depends on the
180size of the RAIDZ vdev and the redundancy level.
181
182For running VMs, IOPS is the more important metric in most situations.
183
184
185[[sysadmin_zfs_raid_size_space_usage_redundancy]]
186Size, Space usage and Redundancy
187^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
188
189While a pool made of 'mirror' vdevs will have the best performance
190characteristics, the usable space will be 50% of the disks available. Less if a
191mirror vdev consists of more than 2 disks, for example in a 3-way mirror. At
192least one healthy disk per mirror is needed for the pool to stay functional.
193
194The usable space of a 'RAIDZ' type vdev of N disks is roughly N-P, with P being
195the RAIDZ-level. The RAIDZ-level indicates how many arbitrary disks can fail
196without losing data. A special case is a 4 disk pool with RAIDZ2. In this
197situation it is usually better to use 2 mirror vdevs for the better performance
198as the usable space will be the same.
199
200Another important factor when using any RAIDZ level is how ZVOL datasets, which
201are used for VM disks, behave. For each data block the pool needs parity data
202which is at least the size of the minimum block size defined by the `ashift`
203value of the pool. With an ashift of 12 the block size of the pool is 4k. The
204default block size for a ZVOL is 8k. Therefore, in a RAIDZ2 each 8k block
205written will cause two additional 4k parity blocks to be written,
2068k + 4k + 4k = 16k. This is of course a simplified approach and the real
207situation will be slightly different with metadata, compression and such not
208being accounted for in this example.
209
210This behavior can be observed when checking the following properties of the
211ZVOL:
212
213 * `volsize`
214 * `refreservation` (if the pool is not thin provisioned)
215 * `used` (if the pool is thin provisioned and without snapshots present)
216
217----
218# zfs get volsize,refreservation,used <pool>/vm-<vmid>-disk-X
219----
220
221`volsize` is the size of the disk as it is presented to the VM, while
222`refreservation` shows the reserved space on the pool which includes the
223expected space needed for the parity data. If the pool is thin provisioned, the
224`refreservation` will be set to 0. Another way to observe the behavior is to
225compare the used disk space within the VM and the `used` property. Be aware
226that snapshots will skew the value.
227
228There are a few options to counter the increased use of space:
229
230* Increase the `volblocksize` to improve the data to parity ratio
231* Use 'mirror' vdevs instead of 'RAIDZ'
232* Use `ashift=9` (block size of 512 bytes)
233
234The `volblocksize` property can only be set when creating a ZVOL. The default
235value can be changed in the storage configuration. When doing this, the guest
236needs to be tuned accordingly and depending on the use case, the problem of
237write amplification if just moved from the ZFS layer up to the guest.
238
239Using `ashift=9` when creating the pool can lead to bad
240performance, depending on the disks underneath, and cannot be changed later on.
241
242Mirror vdevs (RAID1, RAID10) have favorable behavior for VM workloads. Use
243them, unless your environment has specific needs and characteristics where
244RAIDZ performance characteristics are acceptable.
245
246
247Bootloader
248~~~~~~~~~~
249
250{pve} uses xref:sysboot_proxmox_boot_tool[`proxmox-boot-tool`] to manage the
251bootloader configuration.
252See the chapter on xref:sysboot[{pve} host bootloaders] for details.
253
254
255ZFS Administration
256~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
257
258This section gives you some usage examples for common tasks. ZFS
259itself is really powerful and provides many options. The main commands
260to manage ZFS are `zfs` and `zpool`. Both commands come with great
261manual pages, which can be read with:
262
263----
264# man zpool
265# man zfs
266-----
267
268[[sysadmin_zfs_create_new_zpool]]
269Create a new zpool
270^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
271
272To create a new pool, at least one disk is needed. The `ashift` should
273have the same sector-size (2 power of `ashift`) or larger as the
274underlying disk.
275
276----
277# zpool create -f -o ashift=12 <pool> <device>
278----
279
280To activate compression (see section <<zfs_compression,Compression in ZFS>>):
281
282----
283# zfs set compression=lz4 <pool>
284----
285
286[[sysadmin_zfs_create_new_zpool_raid0]]
287Create a new pool with RAID-0
288^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
289
290Minimum 1 disk
291
292----
293# zpool create -f -o ashift=12 <pool> <device1> <device2>
294----
295
296[[sysadmin_zfs_create_new_zpool_raid1]]
297Create a new pool with RAID-1
298^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
299
300Minimum 2 disks
301
302----
303# zpool create -f -o ashift=12 <pool> mirror <device1> <device2>
304----
305
306[[sysadmin_zfs_create_new_zpool_raid10]]
307Create a new pool with RAID-10
308^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
309
310Minimum 4 disks
311
312----
313# zpool create -f -o ashift=12 <pool> mirror <device1> <device2> mirror <device3> <device4>
314----
315
316[[sysadmin_zfs_create_new_zpool_raidz1]]
317Create a new pool with RAIDZ-1
318^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
319
320Minimum 3 disks
321
322----
323# zpool create -f -o ashift=12 <pool> raidz1 <device1> <device2> <device3>
324----
325
326Create a new pool with RAIDZ-2
327^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
328
329Minimum 4 disks
330
331----
332# zpool create -f -o ashift=12 <pool> raidz2 <device1> <device2> <device3> <device4>
333----
334
335[[sysadmin_zfs_create_new_zpool_with_cache]]
336Create a new pool with cache (L2ARC)
337^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
338
339It is possible to use a dedicated cache drive partition to increase
340the performance (use SSD).
341
342As `<device>` it is possible to use more devices, like it's shown in
343"Create a new pool with RAID*".
344
345----
346# zpool create -f -o ashift=12 <pool> <device> cache <cache_device>
347----
348
349[[sysadmin_zfs_create_new_zpool_with_log]]
350Create a new pool with log (ZIL)
351^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
352
353It is possible to use a dedicated cache drive partition to increase
354the performance(SSD).
355
356As `<device>` it is possible to use more devices, like it's shown in
357"Create a new pool with RAID*".
358
359----
360# zpool create -f -o ashift=12 <pool> <device> log <log_device>
361----
362
363[[sysadmin_zfs_add_cache_and_log_dev]]
364Add cache and log to an existing pool
365^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
366
367If you have a pool without cache and log. First partition the SSD in
3682 partition with `parted` or `gdisk`
369
370IMPORTANT: Always use GPT partition tables.
371
372The maximum size of a log device should be about half the size of
373physical memory, so this is usually quite small. The rest of the SSD
374can be used as cache.
375
376----
377# zpool add -f <pool> log <device-part1> cache <device-part2>
378----
379
380[[sysadmin_zfs_change_failed_dev]]
381Changing a failed device
382^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
383
384----
385# zpool replace -f <pool> <old device> <new device>
386----
387
388.Changing a failed bootable device
389
390Depending on how {pve} was installed it is either using `systemd-boot` or `grub`
391through `proxmox-boot-tool`
392footnote:[Systems installed with {pve} 6.4 or later, EFI systems installed with
393{pve} 5.4 or later] or plain `grub` as bootloader (see
394xref:sysboot[Host Bootloader]). You can check by running:
395
396----
397# proxmox-boot-tool status
398----
399
400The first steps of copying the partition table, reissuing GUIDs and replacing
401the ZFS partition are the same. To make the system bootable from the new disk,
402different steps are needed which depend on the bootloader in use.
403
404----
405# sgdisk <healthy bootable device> -R <new device>
406# sgdisk -G <new device>
407# zpool replace -f <pool> <old zfs partition> <new zfs partition>
408----
409
410NOTE: Use the `zpool status -v` command to monitor how far the resilvering
411process of the new disk has progressed.
412
413.With `proxmox-boot-tool`:
414
415----
416# proxmox-boot-tool format <new disk's ESP>
417# proxmox-boot-tool init <new disk's ESP>
418----
419
420NOTE: `ESP` stands for EFI System Partition, which is setup as partition #2 on
421bootable disks setup by the {pve} installer since version 5.4. For details, see
422xref:sysboot_proxmox_boot_setup[Setting up a new partition for use as synced ESP].
423
424.With plain `grub`:
425
426----
427# grub-install <new disk>
428----
429NOTE: plain `grub` is only used on systems installed with {pve} 6.3 or earlier,
430which have not been manually migrated to using `proxmox-boot-tool` yet.
431
432
433Configure E-Mail Notification
434~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
435
436ZFS comes with an event daemon `ZED`, which monitors events generated by the ZFS
437kernel module. The daemon can also send emails on ZFS events like pool errors.
438Newer ZFS packages ship the daemon in a separate `zfs-zed` package, which should
439already be installed by default in {pve}.
440
441You can configure the daemon via the file `/etc/zfs/zed.d/zed.rc` with your
442favorite editor. The required setting for email notification is
443`ZED_EMAIL_ADDR`, which is set to `root` by default.
444
445--------
446ZED_EMAIL_ADDR="root"
447--------
448
449Please note {pve} forwards mails to `root` to the email address
450configured for the root user.
451
452
453[[sysadmin_zfs_limit_memory_usage]]
454Limit ZFS Memory Usage
455~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
456
457ZFS uses '50 %' of the host memory for the **A**daptive **R**eplacement
458**C**ache (ARC) by default. Allocating enough memory for the ARC is crucial for
459IO performance, so reduce it with caution. As a general rule of thumb, allocate
460at least +2 GiB Base + 1 GiB/TiB-Storage+. For example, if you have a pool with
461+8 TiB+ of available storage space then you should use +10 GiB+ of memory for
462the ARC.
463
464You can change the ARC usage limit for the current boot (a reboot resets this
465change again) by writing to the +zfs_arc_max+ module parameter directly:
466
467----
468 echo "$[10 * 1024*1024*1024]" >/sys/module/zfs/parameters/zfs_arc_max
469----
470
471To *permanently change* the ARC limits, add the following line to
472`/etc/modprobe.d/zfs.conf`:
473
474--------
475options zfs zfs_arc_max=8589934592
476--------
477
478This example setting limits the usage to 8 GiB ('8 * 2^30^').
479
480IMPORTANT: In case your desired +zfs_arc_max+ value is lower than or equal to
481+zfs_arc_min+ (which defaults to 1/32 of the system memory), +zfs_arc_max+ will
482be ignored unless you also set +zfs_arc_min+ to at most +zfs_arc_max - 1+.
483
484----
485echo "$[8 * 1024*1024*1024 - 1]" >/sys/module/zfs/parameters/zfs_arc_min
486echo "$[8 * 1024*1024*1024]" >/sys/module/zfs/parameters/zfs_arc_max
487----
488
489This example setting (temporarily) limits the usage to 8 GiB ('8 * 2^30^') on
490systems with more than 256 GiB of total memory, where simply setting
491+zfs_arc_max+ alone would not work.
492
493[IMPORTANT]
494====
495If your root file system is ZFS, you must update your initramfs every
496time this value changes:
497
498----
499# update-initramfs -u -k all
500----
501
502You *must reboot* to activate these changes.
503====
504
505
506[[zfs_swap]]
507SWAP on ZFS
508~~~~~~~~~~~
509
510Swap-space created on a zvol may generate some troubles, like blocking the
511server or generating a high IO load, often seen when starting a Backup
512to an external Storage.
513
514We strongly recommend to use enough memory, so that you normally do not
515run into low memory situations. Should you need or want to add swap, it is
516preferred to create a partition on a physical disk and use it as a swap device.
517You can leave some space free for this purpose in the advanced options of the
518installer. Additionally, you can lower the
519``swappiness'' value. A good value for servers is 10:
520
521----
522# sysctl -w vm.swappiness=10
523----
524
525To make the swappiness persistent, open `/etc/sysctl.conf` with
526an editor of your choice and add the following line:
527
528--------
529vm.swappiness = 10
530--------
531
532.Linux kernel `swappiness` parameter values
533[width="100%",cols="<m,2d",options="header"]
534|===========================================================
535| Value | Strategy
536| vm.swappiness = 0 | The kernel will swap only to avoid
537an 'out of memory' condition
538| vm.swappiness = 1 | Minimum amount of swapping without
539disabling it entirely.
540| vm.swappiness = 10 | This value is sometimes recommended to
541improve performance when sufficient memory exists in a system.
542| vm.swappiness = 60 | The default value.
543| vm.swappiness = 100 | The kernel will swap aggressively.
544|===========================================================
545
546[[zfs_encryption]]
547Encrypted ZFS Datasets
548~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
549
550WARNING: Native ZFS encryption in {pve} is experimental. Known limitations and
551issues include Replication with encrypted datasets
552footnote:[https://bugzilla.proxmox.com/show_bug.cgi?id=2350],
553as well as checksum errors when using Snapshots or ZVOLs.
554footnote:[https://github.com/openzfs/zfs/issues/11688]
555
556ZFS on Linux version 0.8.0 introduced support for native encryption of
557datasets. After an upgrade from previous ZFS on Linux versions, the encryption
558feature can be enabled per pool:
559
560----
561# zpool get feature@encryption tank
562NAME PROPERTY VALUE SOURCE
563tank feature@encryption disabled local
564
565# zpool set feature@encryption=enabled
566
567# zpool get feature@encryption tank
568NAME PROPERTY VALUE SOURCE
569tank feature@encryption enabled local
570----
571
572WARNING: There is currently no support for booting from pools with encrypted
573datasets using Grub, and only limited support for automatically unlocking
574encrypted datasets on boot. Older versions of ZFS without encryption support
575will not be able to decrypt stored data.
576
577NOTE: It is recommended to either unlock storage datasets manually after
578booting, or to write a custom unit to pass the key material needed for
579unlocking on boot to `zfs load-key`.
580
581WARNING: Establish and test a backup procedure before enabling encryption of
582production data. If the associated key material/passphrase/keyfile has been
583lost, accessing the encrypted data is no longer possible.
584
585Encryption needs to be setup when creating datasets/zvols, and is inherited by
586default to child datasets. For example, to create an encrypted dataset
587`tank/encrypted_data` and configure it as storage in {pve}, run the following
588commands:
589
590----
591# zfs create -o encryption=on -o keyformat=passphrase tank/encrypted_data
592Enter passphrase:
593Re-enter passphrase:
594
595# pvesm add zfspool encrypted_zfs -pool tank/encrypted_data
596----
597
598All guest volumes/disks create on this storage will be encrypted with the
599shared key material of the parent dataset.
600
601To actually use the storage, the associated key material needs to be loaded
602and the dataset needs to be mounted. This can be done in one step with:
603
604----
605# zfs mount -l tank/encrypted_data
606Enter passphrase for 'tank/encrypted_data':
607----
608
609It is also possible to use a (random) keyfile instead of prompting for a
610passphrase by setting the `keylocation` and `keyformat` properties, either at
611creation time or with `zfs change-key` on existing datasets:
612
613----
614# dd if=/dev/urandom of=/path/to/keyfile bs=32 count=1
615
616# zfs change-key -o keyformat=raw -o keylocation=file:///path/to/keyfile tank/encrypted_data
617----
618
619WARNING: When using a keyfile, special care needs to be taken to secure the
620keyfile against unauthorized access or accidental loss. Without the keyfile, it
621is not possible to access the plaintext data!
622
623A guest volume created underneath an encrypted dataset will have its
624`encryptionroot` property set accordingly. The key material only needs to be
625loaded once per encryptionroot to be available to all encrypted datasets
626underneath it.
627
628See the `encryptionroot`, `encryption`, `keylocation`, `keyformat` and
629`keystatus` properties, the `zfs load-key`, `zfs unload-key` and `zfs
630change-key` commands and the `Encryption` section from `man zfs` for more
631details and advanced usage.
632
633
634[[zfs_compression]]
635Compression in ZFS
636~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
637
638When compression is enabled on a dataset, ZFS tries to compress all *new*
639blocks before writing them and decompresses them on reading. Already
640existing data will not be compressed retroactively.
641
642You can enable compression with:
643
644----
645# zfs set compression=<algorithm> <dataset>
646----
647
648We recommend using the `lz4` algorithm, because it adds very little CPU
649overhead. Other algorithms like `lzjb` and `gzip-N`, where `N` is an
650integer from `1` (fastest) to `9` (best compression ratio), are also
651available. Depending on the algorithm and how compressible the data is,
652having compression enabled can even increase I/O performance.
653
654You can disable compression at any time with:
655
656----
657# zfs set compression=off <dataset>
658----
659
660Again, only new blocks will be affected by this change.
661
662
663[[sysadmin_zfs_special_device]]
664ZFS Special Device
665~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
666
667Since version 0.8.0 ZFS supports `special` devices. A `special` device in a
668pool is used to store metadata, deduplication tables, and optionally small
669file blocks.
670
671A `special` device can improve the speed of a pool consisting of slow spinning
672hard disks with a lot of metadata changes. For example workloads that involve
673creating, updating or deleting a large number of files will benefit from the
674presence of a `special` device. ZFS datasets can also be configured to store
675whole small files on the `special` device which can further improve the
676performance. Use fast SSDs for the `special` device.
677
678IMPORTANT: The redundancy of the `special` device should match the one of the
679pool, since the `special` device is a point of failure for the whole pool.
680
681WARNING: Adding a `special` device to a pool cannot be undone!
682
683.Create a pool with `special` device and RAID-1:
684
685----
686# zpool create -f -o ashift=12 <pool> mirror <device1> <device2> special mirror <device3> <device4>
687----
688
689.Add a `special` device to an existing pool with RAID-1:
690
691----
692# zpool add <pool> special mirror <device1> <device2>
693----
694
695ZFS datasets expose the `special_small_blocks=<size>` property. `size` can be
696`0` to disable storing small file blocks on the `special` device or a power of
697two in the range between `512B` to `1M`. After setting the property new file
698blocks smaller than `size` will be allocated on the `special` device.
699
700IMPORTANT: If the value for `special_small_blocks` is greater than or equal to
701the `recordsize` (default `128K`) of the dataset, *all* data will be written to
702the `special` device, so be careful!
703
704Setting the `special_small_blocks` property on a pool will change the default
705value of that property for all child ZFS datasets (for example all containers
706in the pool will opt in for small file blocks).
707
708.Opt in for all file smaller than 4K-blocks pool-wide:
709
710----
711# zfs set special_small_blocks=4K <pool>
712----
713
714.Opt in for small file blocks for a single dataset:
715
716----
717# zfs set special_small_blocks=4K <pool>/<filesystem>
718----
719
720.Opt out from small file blocks for a single dataset:
721
722----
723# zfs set special_small_blocks=0 <pool>/<filesystem>
724----
725
726[[sysadmin_zfs_features]]
727ZFS Pool Features
728~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
729
730Changes to the on-disk format in ZFS are only made between major version changes
731and are specified through *features*. All features, as well as the general
732mechanism are well documented in the `zpool-features(5)` manpage.
733
734Since enabling new features can render a pool not importable by an older version
735of ZFS, this needs to be done actively by the administrator, by running
736`zpool upgrade` on the pool (see the `zpool-upgrade(8)` manpage).
737
738Unless you need to use one of the new features, there is no upside to enabling
739them.
740
741In fact, there are some downsides to enabling new features:
742
743* A system with root on ZFS, that still boots using `grub` will become
744 unbootable if a new feature is active on the rpool, due to the incompatible
745 implementation of ZFS in grub.
746* The system will not be able to import any upgraded pool when booted with an
747 older kernel, which still ships with the old ZFS modules.
748* Booting an older {pve} ISO to repair a non-booting system will likewise not
749 work.
750
751IMPORTANT: Do *not* upgrade your rpool if your system is still booted with
752`grub`, as this will render your system unbootable. This includes systems
753installed before {pve} 5.4, and systems booting with legacy BIOS boot (see
754xref:sysboot_determine_bootloader_used[how to determine the bootloader]).
755
756.Enable new features for a ZFS pool:
757----
758# zpool upgrade <pool>
759----