To be fair - every fs on the planet had to go through this at one time or another.
We have been perhaps 'spoiled' by the odd runaway log or such that has pushed
UFS to over 103% 'full', struggled on regardless, allowing us to ssh in from
12,000 miles away, kill the offender, clean up the mess, and soldier-on w/o even
a reboot, let alone a crash.
ZFS will (probably) get there one day as well.
But at present, it has become a distraction we don't need.
We're chasing promises...
I'd happily trade all future interest in ZFS for better ufs, nfs, smbfs, ntfs,
xfs, jfs, et al performance/safety/compatibility,
... if only 'coz that's where the bulk of the data we need to 'talk to' actually
resides - not on ZFS or GPFS.
Bill
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