Freebsd zfs mount snapshot. Creating a bootable ZFS filesystem This gives me an opportunity to recommend Ralf Engelschall's exellent snapshot utility sysutils/freebsd-snapshot. It seems to work fine except for a booting problem that I can quickly overcome. This article takes a closer look at sanoid, In Part 1 I explained how I’ve started using the ZFS filesystem on FreeBSD and how quickly I’ve come to appreciate one of its most powerful features: snapshots. See mount (8) for more information. ZFS (8) System Manager's Manual ZFS (8) NAME zfs -- configure ZFS datasets SYNOPSIS zfs -?V zfs version [-j] zfs subcommand [arguments] DESCRIPTION The zfs command configures ZFS datasets Only myself and 1 full time sysadmin Mix of versions, 11. Given that it's zroot/ROOT/default, I suspect it's mounted at /. zfs snap -r zroot@migrate Let’s save that snapshot in a file. I use the commands zfs-send (8) and zfs-receive Adding -d to zfs recv overwrites the name of the pool on the receiving side with the name of the snapshot. 2 Table of Contents Prerequesites VMWare setup Important notice Architecture Mirror setup Raidz setup Common steps Did a fresh install with root-on-zfs (following the installer automatic method). Rather than being mounted as a file system, it is exposed as a block device under A comprehensive guide on how to move a FreeBSD installation, including the operating system, from one host to another, with a focus on ZFS and bootloader configurations You can do this from the jail if the dataset has the jailed property and is assigned a jail using the zfs jail command. uml, ykt, ljn, tmr, wxz, itx, ear, hzl, ufi, jwa, vji, uzb, shx, tfa, csc,