Comment by whataguy

Comment by whataguy 5 days ago

6 replies

The difference is that the ZFS kernel module is included by default with Proxmox, whereas with e.g. Debian, you would need to install it manually.

pimeys 5 days ago

And you can't follow the latest kernel before the ZFS module supports it.

  • ryao 4 days ago

    There is a trick for this:

      * Step 1: Make friends with a ZFS developer.
      * Step 2: Guilt him into writing patches to add support as soon as a new kernel is released.
      * Step 3: Enjoy
    
    Adding support for a new kernel release to ZFS is usually only a few hours of work. I have done it in the past more than a dozen times.
  • gf000 4 days ago

    I use NixOS, and it simply updates to the latest kernel that supports zfs, with a single, declerative option.

  • blibble 5 days ago

    for Debian that's not exactly a problem

    • oarsinsync 5 days ago

      Unless you’re using Debian backports, and they backport a new kernel a week before the zfs backport package update happens.

      Happened to me more than once. I ended up manually changing the kernel version limitations the second time just to get me back online, but I don’t recall if that ended up hurting me in the long run or not.