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zfs(1M)			System Administration Commands		       zfs(1M)

NAME
       zfs - configures	ZFS file systems

SYNOPSIS
       zfs [-?]

       zfs create [-p] [-o property=value] ... filesystem

       zfs create [-ps]	[-b blocksize] [-o property=value] ... -V size volume

       zfs destroy [-rRf] filesystem|volume|snapshot

       zfs snapshot [-r] [-o property=value]...
	     filesystem@snapname|volume@snapname

       zfs rollback [-rRf] snapshot

       zfs clone [-p] [-o property=value] ... snapshot filesystem|volume

       zfs promote clone-filesystem

       zfs rename filesystem|volume|snapshot
	    filesystem|volume|snapshot

       zfs rename [-p] filesystem|volume filesystem|volume

       zfs rename -r snapshot snapshot

       zfs list	[-r|-d depth][-H][-o property[,...]] [-t type[,...]]
	    [-s	property] ... [-S property] ...	[filesystem|volume|snapshot] ...

       zfs set property=value filesystem|volume|snapshot ...

       zfs get [-r|-d depth][-Hp][-o field[,...]] [-s source[,...]]
	    "all" | property[,...] filesystem|volume|snapshot ...

       zfs inherit [-r]	property filesystem|volume|snapshot ...

       zfs upgrade [-v]

       zfs upgrade [-r]	[-V version] -a	| filesystem

       zfs userspace [-niHp] [-o field[,...]] [-sS field] ...
	    [-t	type [,...]] filesystem|snapshot

       zfs groupspace [-niHp] [-o field[,...]] [-sS field] ...
	    [-t	type [,...]] filesystem|snapshot

       zfs mount

       zfs mount [-vO] [-o options] -a | filesystem

       zfs unmount [-f]	-a | filesystem|mountpoint

       zfs share -a | filesystem

       zfs unshare -a filesystem|mountpoint

       zfs send	[-vR] [-[iI] snapshot] snapshot

       zfs receive [-vnFu] filesystem|volume|snapshot

       zfs receive [-vnFu] -d filesystem

       zfs allow filesystem|volume

       zfs allow [-ldug] "everyone"|user|group[,...] perm|@setname[,...]
	    filesystem|volume

       zfs allow [-ld] -e perm|@setname[,...] filesystem|volume

       zfs allow -c perm|@setname[,...]	filesystem|volume

       zfs allow -s @setname perm|@setname[,...] filesystem|volume

       zfs unallow [-rldug] "everyone"|user|group[,...]	[perm|@setname[,... ]]
	    filesystem|volume

       zfs unallow [-rld] -e [perm|@setname[,... ]] filesystem|volume

       zfs unallow [-r]	-c [perm|@setname[ ... ]] filesystem|volume

       zfs unallow [-r]	-s @setname [perm|@setname[,...	]] filesystem|volume

DESCRIPTION
       The  zfs	 command configures ZFS	datasets within	a ZFS storage pool, as
       described in zpool(1M). A dataset is identified by a unique path	within
       the ZFS namespace. For example:

	 pool/{filesystem,volume,snapshot}

       ...where	 the  maximum  length  of  a  dataset  name is MAXNAMELEN (256
       bytes).

       A dataset can be	one of the following:

       file system

	   A ZFS dataset of type "filesystem" that can be mounted  within  the
	   standard  system  namespace	and  behaves  like other file systems.
	   While ZFS file systems are designed to be  POSIX  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.

       volume

	   A  logical  volume  exported	as a raw or block device. This type of
	   dataset should only be used under special circumstances. File  sys-
	   tems	are typically used in most environments.

       snapshot

	   A  read-only	version	of a file system or volume at a	given point in
	   time. It is specified as filesystem@name or volume@name.

   ZFS File System Hierarchy
       A ZFS storage pool is a logical	collection  of	devices	 that  provide
       space  for  datasets.  A	 storage pool is also the root of the ZFS file
       system hierarchy.

       The 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 zpool(1M) command.

       See zpool(1M) for more information on creating and administering	pools.

   Snapshots
       A 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.

       Snapshots can have arbitrary names. Snapshots of	volumes	can be	cloned
       or rolled back, but cannot be accessed independently.

       File  system snapshots can be accessed under the	".zfs/snapshot"	direc-
       tory in the root	 of  the  file	system.	 Snapshots  are	 automatically
       mounted	on demand and may be unmounted at regular intervals. The visi-
       bility of the ".zfs" directory can be controlled	by the "snapdir" prop-
       erty.

   Clones
       A  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.

       Clones  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  "origin" property exposes this dependency, and the destroy command
       lists any such dependencies, if they exist.

       The clone parent-child dependency relationship can be reversed by using
       the  "promote"  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.

   Mount Points
       Creating	a ZFS file system is a simple operation, so the	number of file
       systems per system is likely to be numerous. To	cope  with  this,  ZFS
       automatically  manages mounting and unmounting file systems without the
       need to edit the	/etc/vfstab file. All automatically managed file  sys-
       tems are	mounted	by ZFS at boot time.

       By  default,  file  systems  are	mounted	under /path, where path	is the
       name of the file	system in the ZFS namespace. Directories  are  created
       and destroyed as	needed.

       A  file	system can also	have a mount point set in the mountpoint prop-
       erty. This directory is created as needed, and ZFS automatically	mounts
       the file	system when the	zfs mount -a command is	invoked	(without edit-
       ing /etc/vfstab). The mountpoint	 property  can	be  inherited,	so  if
       pool/home has a mount point of /export/stuff, then pool/home/user auto-
       matically inherits a mount point	of /export/stuff/user.

       A file system mountpoint	property of none prevents the file system from
       being mounted.

       If  needed, ZFS file systems can	also be	managed	with traditional tools
       (mount, umount, /etc/vfstab). If	a file system's	mount point is set  to
       legacy,	ZFS makes no attempt to	manage the file	system,	and the	admin-
       istrator	is responsible for mounting and	unmounting the file system.

   Zones
       A ZFS file system can be	added  to  a  non-global  zone	by  using  the
       zonecfg	add  fs	 subcommand. A ZFS file	system that is added to	a non-
       global zone must	have its mountpoint property set to legacy.

       The physical properties of an added file	system are controlled  by  the
       global  administrator. However, the zone	administrator can create, mod-
       ify, or destroy files within the	added file system,  depending  on  how
       the file	system is mounted.

       A  dataset  can also be delegated to a non-global zone by using zonecfg
       add dataset subcommand. You cannot delegate a dataset to	one  zone  and
       the  children of	the same dataset to another zone. The zone administra-
       tor can change properties of the	dataset	or any of its  children.  How-
       ever, the quota property	is controlled by the global administrator.

       A  ZFS  volume  can  be added as	a device to a non-global zone by using
       zonecfg add device subcommand. However, its physical properties can  be
       modified	only by	the global administrator.

       For more	information about zonecfg syntax, see zonecfg(1M).

       After  a	 dataset is delegated to a non-global zone, the	zoned property
       is automatically	set. A zoned file system  cannot  be  mounted  in  the
       global  zone,  since the	zone administrator might have to set the mount
       point to	an unacceptable	value.

       The global administrator	can forcibly clear the zoned property,	though
       this  should be done with extreme care. The global administrator	should
       verify that all the mount points	are  acceptable	 before	 clearing  the
       property.

   Native Properties
       Properties  are	divided	 into  two  types, native and user-defined (or
       "user").	Native properties either export	internal statistics or control
       ZFS  behavior.  In  addition,  native properties	are either editable or
       read-only. User properties have no effect on ZFS	behavior, but you  can
       use them	to annotate datasets in	a way that is meaningful in your envi-
       ronment.	For more information about  user  properties,  see  the	 "User
       Properties" section, below.

       Every  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	 snap-
       shots).

       The  values of numeric properties can be	specified using	human-readable
       suffixes	(for example, k, KB,  M,  Gb,  and  so	forth,	up  to	Z  for
       zettabyte). The following are all valid (and equal) specifications:

	 1536M,	1.5g, 1.50GB

       The  values  of	non-numeric  properties	are case sensitive and must be
       lowercase, except for mountpoint, sharenfs, and sharesmb.

       The 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.

       available

	   The 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.

	   This	property can also be referred to by its	shortened column name,
	   avail.

       compressratio

	   The	compression  ratio  achieved  for this dataset,	expressed as a
	   multiplier. Compression can be turned on by running:	zfs  set  com-
	   pression=on dataset.	The default value is off.

       creation

	   The time this dataset was created.

       mounted

	   For	file  systems,	indicates whether the file system is currently
	   mounted. This property can be either	yes or no.

       origin

	   For cloned file systems or volumes, the  snapshot  from  which  the
	   clone was created. The origin cannot	be destroyed (even with	the -r
	   or -f options) so long as a clone exists.

       referenced

	   The 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.

	   This	property can also be referred to by its	shortened column name,
	   refer.

       type

	   The type of dataset:	filesystem, volume, or snapshot.

       used

	   The	amount	of  space consumed by this dataset and all its descen-
	   dents. 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 con-
	   sumes 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.

	   When	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.

	   The 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  fsync(3c)  or	O_SYNC does not	necessarily guarantee that the
	   space usage information is updated immediately.

       usedby*

	   The usedby* properties decompose the	used properties	into the vari-
	   ous reasons that space is used. Specifically, used =	usedbychildren
	   + usedbydataset + usedbyrefreservation  +,  usedbysnapshots.	 These
	   properties  are  only available for datasets	created	on zpool "ver-
	   sion	13" pools.

       usedbychildren

	   The amount of space used by children	of this	dataset,  which	 would
	   be freed if all the dataset's children were destroyed.

       usedbydataset

	   The	amount	of  space  used	by this	dataset	itself,	which would be
	   freed if the	dataset	 were  destroyed  (after  first	 removing  any
	   refreservation  and	destroying  any	necessary snapshots or descen-
	   dents).

       usedbyrefreservation

	   The amount of space used by a refreservation	set on	this  dataset,
	   which would be freed	if the refreservation was removed.

       usedbysnapshots

	   The	amount of space	consumed by snapshots of this dataset. In par-
	   ticular, it is the amount of	space that would be freed  if  all  of
	   this	dataset's snapshots were destroyed. Note that this is not sim-
	   ply the sum of the snapshots' used properties because space can  be
	   shared by multiple snapshots

       userused@user

	   The	amount	of  space  referenced in this dataset by the specified
	   user. Space is charged to the owner of each file, as	 displayed  by
	   ls  -l.  The	 amount	of space charged is displayed by du and	ls -s.
	   See the zfs userspace subcommand for	more information.

	   Unprivileged	users can access only their own	space usage. The  root
	   user,  or  a	 user who has been granted the userused	privilege with
	   zfs allow, can access everyone's usage.

	   This	property cannot	be set on volumes, or on pools before  version
	   15.	The  userused@... properties are not displayed by zfs get all.
	   The user's name must	be appended after the @	symbol,	using  one  of
	   the following forms:

	       o      posix name (for example, joe)

	       o      posix numeric id (for example, 789)

	       o      sid name (for example, joe.smith@mydomain)

	       o      sid numeric id (for example, S-1-123-456-789)

       groupused@group

	   The	amount	of  space  referenced in this dataset by the specified
	   group. Space	is charged to the group	of each	file, as displayed  by
	   ls -l. See the userused@user	property for more information.

	   Unprivileged	 users	can only access	the groupused@... property for
	   groups that they are	a member of. The root user, or a user who  has
	   been	granted	the groupused privilege	with zfs allow,	can access all
	   groups' usage.

       volblocksize=blocksize

	   For volumes,	specifies the block size of the	volume.	The  blocksize
	   cannot be changed once the volume has been written, so it should be
	   set at volume creation time.	The default blocksize for volumes is 8
	   Kbytes. Any power of	2 from 512 bytes to 128	Kbytes is valid.

	   This	property can also be referred to by its	shortened column name,
	   volblock.

       The following native properties can be used to change the behavior of a
       ZFS dataset.

       aclinherit=discard | noallow | restricted | passthrough | passthrough-x

	   Controls how	ACL entries are	inherited when files  and  directories
	   are	created.  A file system	with an	aclinherit property of discard
	   does	not inherit any	ACL entries. A file system with	an  aclinherit
	   property  value  of	noallow	 only inherits inheritable ACL entries
	   that	specify	"deny" permissions. The	property value restricted (the
	   default) removes the	write_acl and write_owner permissions when the
	   ACL entry is	inherited. A file system with an  aclinherit  property
	   value  of  passthrough inherits all inheritable ACL entries without
	   any modifications made to the ACL entries when they are  inherited.
	   A  file  system  with an aclinherit property	value of passthrough-x
	   has the same	 meaning  as  passthrough,  except  that  the  owner@,
	   group@,  and	 everyone@ ACEs	inherit	the execute permission only if
	   the file creation mode also requests	the execute bit.

	   When	the property value is set to passthrough,  files  are  created
	   with	 a  mode determined by the inheritable ACEs. If	no inheritable
	   ACEs	exist that affect the mode, then the mode is set in accordance
	   to the requested mode from the application.

       aclmode=discard | groupmask | passthrough

	   Controls how	an ACL is modified during chmod(2). A file system with
	   an aclmode property of discard deletes all ACL entries that do  not
	   represent  the  mode	 of the	file. An aclmode property of groupmask
	   (the	default) reduces user or group	permissions.  The  permissions
	   are	reduced,  such that they are no	greater	than the group permis-
	   sion	bits, unless it	is a user entry	that has the same UID  as  the
	   owner  of  the file or directory. In	this case, the ACL permissions
	   are reduced so that they are	no greater than	owner permission bits.
	   A  file  system  with  an aclmode property of passthrough indicates
	   that	no changes are made to the ACL other than generating the  nec-
	   essary  ACL entries to represent the	new mode of the	file or	direc-
	   tory.

       atime=on	| off

	   Controls 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 on.

       canmount=on | off | noauto

	   If this property is set to off, the file system cannot be  mounted,
	   and	is  ignored  by	 zfs mount -a. Setting this property to	off is
	   similar to setting the mountpoint property to none, except that the
	   dataset still has a normal mountpoint property, which can be	inher-
	   ited. Setting this property to  off	allows	datasets  to  be  used
	   solely as a mechanism to inherit properties.	One example of setting
	   canmount=off	is to have two datasets	with the same  mountpoint,  so
	   that	 the  children	of both	datasets appear	in the same directory,
	   but might have different inherited characteristics.

	   When	the noauto 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  zfs
	   mount -a command or unmounted by the	zfs unmount -a command.

	   This	property is not	inherited.

       checksum=on | off | fletcher2,| fletcher4 | sha256

	   Controls  the  checksum  used to verify data	integrity. The default
	   value is on,	which automatically selects an	appropriate  algorithm
	   (currently, fletcher2, but this may change in future	releases). The
	   value off disables  integrity  checking  on	user  data.  Disabling
	   checksums is	NOT a recommended practice.

       compression=on |	off | lzjb | gzip | gzip-N

	   Controls  the compression algorithm used for	this dataset. The lzjb
	   compression algorithm is optimized for performance while  providing
	   decent  data	 compression.  Setting	compression  to	 "on" uses the
	   "lzjb" compression algorithm. The "gzip" compression	algorithm uses
	   the	same  compression  as the gzip(1) command. You can specify the
	   "gzip" level	by using the value "gzip-N" where N is an integer from
	   1  (fastest)	 to  9	(best compression ratio). Currently, "gzip" is
	   equivalent to "gzip-6" (which is also the default for gzip(1)).

	   This	property can also be referred to by its	shortened column  name
	   "compress".

       copies=1	| 2 | 3

	   Controls  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 used prop-
	   erty	and counting against quotas and	reservations.

	   Changing this property only affects newly-written data.  Therefore,
	   set	this  property	at  file  system creation time by using	the -o
	   copies= option.

       devices=on | off

	   Controls whether device nodes can be	opened on  this	 file  system.
	   The default value is	on.

       exec=on | off

	   Controls  whether  processes	 can be	executed from within this file
	   system. The default value is	on.

       mountpoint=path | none |	legacy

	   Controls the	mount point used for this file system. See the	"Mount
	   Points"  section for	more information on how	this property is used.

	   When	the mountpoint 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 legacy, then they remain	unmounted.  Otherwise,
	   they	 are  automatically remounted in the new location if the prop-
	   erty	was previously legacy or none, or if they were mounted	before
	   the	property was changed. In addition, any shared file systems are
	   unshared and	shared in the new location.

       nbmand=on | off

	   Controls whether the	file system should be mounted with nbmand (Non
	   Blocking  mandatory	locks).	This is	used for CIFS clients. Changes
	   to this property only take effect when the file system is  umounted
	   and remounted. See mount(1M)	for more information on	nbmand mounts.

       primarycache=all	| none | metadata

	   Controls what is cached in the primary cache	(ARC). If  this	 prop-
	   erty	 is set	to all,	then both user data and	metadata is cached. If
	   this	property is set	to none, then neither user data	 nor  metadata
	   is  cached. If this property	is set to metadata, then only metadata
	   is cached. The default value	is all.

       quota=size | none

	   Limits the amount of	space a	dataset	and its	descendents  can  con-
	   sume.  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.

	   Quotas cannot be set	on volumes, as the volsize property acts as an
	   implicit quota.

       userquota@user=size | none

	   Limits the amount of	space referenced by the	specified user,	 which
	   is specified	by the userspace@user property.

	   Enforcement	of  user  quotas may be	delayed	by several seconds. In
	   other words,	users may go a bit over	their quota before the	system
	   notices  that  they	are over quota and begins to refuse additional
	   writes with EDQUOT. See  the	 zfs  userspace	 subcommand  for  more
	   information.

	   Unprivileged	 users can get only their own quota. The root user, or
	   a user who has been granted the userquota privilege with zfs	allow,
	   can get and set everyone's quota.

	   This	 property cannot be set	on volumes, on filesystems before ver-
	   sion	4, or on pools before version 15. The userquota@... properties
	   are	not displayed by zfs get all. The user's name must be appended
	   after the @ symbol, using one of the	following forms:

	       o      posix name (for example, joe)

	       o      posix numeric id (for example, 789)

	       o      sid name (for example, joe.smith@mydomain)

	       o      sid numeric id (for example, S-1-123-456-789)

       groupquota@group=size | none

	   Limits the amount of	space referenced by the	specified  group.  See
	   the userquota@user property for more	information.

	   Unprivileged	users can only get the quota of	groups they are	a mem-
	   ber of. The	root  user,  or	 a  user  who  has  been  granted  the
	   groupquota  privilege  with	zfs allow, can get and set all groups'
	   quotas.

       readonly=on | off

	   Controls whether this dataset can be	modified. The default value is
	   off.

	   This	property can also be referred to by its	shortened column name,
	   rdonly.

       recordsize=size

	   Specifies 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. ZFS automatically  tunes	 block
	   sizes according to internal algorithms optimized for	typical	access
	   patterns.

	   For databases that create very large	files but access them in small
	   random  chunks,  these  algorithms  may be suboptimal. Specifying a
	   recordsize 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.

	   The	size specified must be a power of two greater than or equal to
	   512 and less	than or	equal to 128 Kbytes.

	   Changing the	file system's recordsize affects  only	files  created
	   afterward; existing files are unaffected.

	   This	property can also be referred to by its	shortened column name,
	   recsize.

       refquota=size | none

	   Limits 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.

       refreservation=size | none

	   The	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	 refreservation.  The  refreservation  reservation  is
	   accounted  for  in  the  parent  datasets'  space  used, and	counts
	   against the parent datasets'	quotas and reservations.

	   If refreservation 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.

	   This	property can also be referred to by its	shortened column name,
	   refreserv.

       reservation=size	| none

	   The minimum amount of space guaranteed to a dataset and its descen-
	   dents. 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.

	   This	property can also be referred to by its	shortened column name,
	   reserv.

       secondarycache=all | none | metadata

	   Controls  what  is  cached  in the secondary	cache (L2ARC). If this
	   property is set to all, then	both user data and metadata is cached.
	   If  this  property is set to	none, then neither user	data nor meta-
	   data	is cached. If this property is	set  to	 metadata,  then  only
	   metadata is cached. The default value is all.

       setuid=on | off

	   Controls  whether the set-UID bit is	respected for the file system.
	   The default value is	on.

       shareiscsi=on | off

	   Like	the sharenfs property, shareiscsi indicates whether a ZFS vol-
	   ume	is exported as an iSCSI	target.	The acceptable values for this
	   property are	on, off, and type=disk.	The default value is  off.  In
	   the	future,	 other	target	types might be supported. For example,
	   tape.

	   You might want to set shareiscsi=on for a file system so  that  all
	   ZFS	volumes	within the file	system are shared by default. However,
	   setting this	property on a file system has no direct	effect.

       sharesmb=on | off | opts

	   Controls whether the	file system is shared  by  using  the  Solaris
	   CIFS	 service,  and what options are	to be used. A file system with
	   the sharesmb	property set to	off  is	 managed  through  traditional
	   tools such as sharemgr(1M). Otherwise, the file system is automati-
	   cally shared	and unshared with the zfs share	and zfs	 unshare  com-
	   mands.  If  the  property is	set to on, the sharemgr(1M) command is
	   invoked with	no options. Otherwise,	the  sharemgr(1M)  command  is
	   invoked with	options	equivalent to the contents of this property.

	   Because SMB 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  (_)  characters. A	pseudo property	"name" is also
	   supported that allows you to	replace	the data set name with a spec-
	   ified  name.	 The specified name is then used to replace the	prefix
	   dataset in the case of inheritance. For  example,  if  the  dataset
	   data/home/john  is  set  to	name=john,  then  data/home/john has a
	   resource name of john. If a child dataset  of  data/home/john/back-
	   ups,	it has a resource name of john_backups.

	   When	SMB shares are created,	the SMB	share name appears as an entry
	   in the .zfs/shares directory. You can use the ls or	chmod  command
	   to display the share-level ACLs on the entries in this directory.

	   When	 the  sharesmb	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	set to off, or if they
	   were	shared before the property was changed.	If the new property is
	   set to off, the file	systems	are unshared.

       sharenfs=on | off | opts

	   Controls  whether  the  file	 system	 is  shared  via NFS, and what
	   options are used. A file system with	a sharenfs property of off  is
	   managed  through  traditional tools such as share(1M), unshare(1M),
	   and dfstab(4). Otherwise, the file system is	 automatically	shared
	   and	unshared  with	the zfs	share and zfs unshare commands.	If the
	   property is set to on, the share(1M)	command	 is  invoked  with  no
	   options.  Otherwise,	 the share(1M) command is invoked with options
	   equivalent to the contents of this property.

	   When	the sharenfs 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	"off", or if they were
	   shared before the property was changed. If the new property is off,
	   the file systems are	unshared.

       snapdir=hidden |	visible

	   Controls whether the	.zfs directory is hidden  or  visible  in  the
	   root	 of  the  file system as discussed in the "Snapshots" section.
	   The default value is	hidden.

       version=1 | 2 | current

	   The 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 zfs upgrade command.

       volsize=size

	   For 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  refreserva-
	   tion	 is  set  instead.  Any	changes	to volsize are reflected in an
	   equivalent change to	the reservation	(or refreservation). The  vol-
	   size	 can  only be set to a multiple	of volblocksize, and cannot be
	   zero.

	   The reservation is kept equal to the	volume's logical size to  pre-
	   vent	 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.

	   Though not recommended, a "sparse volume" (also known as "thin pro-
	   visioning")	can  be	created	by specifying the -s option to the zfs
	   create -V command, or by changing the reservation after the	volume
	   has	been created. A	"sparse	volume"	is a volume where the reserva-
	   tion	is less	then the volume	size. Consequently, writes to a	sparse
	   volume  can	fail  with ENOSPC when the pool	is low on space. For a
	   sparse volume, changes to volsize are not reflected in the reserva-
	   tion.

       vscan=on	| off

	   Controls 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 off.

       xattr=on	| off

	   Controls whether extended attributes	are enabled for	this file sys-
	   tem.	The default value is on.

       zoned=on	| off

	   Controls whether the	dataset	is managed from	a non-global zone. See
	   the "Zones" section for more	information. The default value is off.

       The  following three properties cannot be changed after the file	system
       is created, and therefore, should be set	when the file system  is  cre-
       ated. If	the properties are not set with	the zfs	create or zpool	create
       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.

       casesensitivity=sensitive | insensitive | mixed

	   Indicates whether the file name matching algorithm used by the file
	   system should be case-sensitive, case-insensitive, or allow a  com-
	   bination of both styles of matching.	The default value for the cas-
	   esensitivity	property is sensitive. Traditionally, UNIX  and	 POSIX
	   file	systems	have case-sensitive file names.

	   The mixed value for the casesensitivity 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
	   mixed value behavior, see the Solaris ZFS Administration Guide.

       normalization=none | formD | formKCf

	   Indicates whether the file system should perform a unicode  normal-
	   ization  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	 none,
	   and	the utf8only property was left unspecified, the	utf8only prop-
	   erty	is automatically set to	on. The	default	value of  the  normal-
	   ization property is none. This property cannot be changed after the
	   file	system is created.

       utf8only=on | off

	   Indicates whether the file system should  reject  file  names  that
	   include characters that are not present in the UTF-8	character code
	   set.	If this	property is explicitly set to off,  the	 normalization
	   property  must  either not be explicitly set	or be set to none. The
	   default value for the utf8only property is off. This	property  can-
	   not be changed after	the file system	is created.

       The  casesensitivity,  normalization,  and utf8only properties are also
       new permissions that can	be assigned to non-privileged users  by	 using
       the ZFS delegated administration	feature.

   Temporary Mount Point Properties
       When  a	file  system  is  mounted, either through mount(1M) for	legacy
       mounts or the zfs mount command for  normal  file  systems,  its	 mount
       options	are  set  according to its properties. The correlation between
       properties and mount options is as follows:

	     PROPERTY		     MOUNT OPTION
	      devices		      devices/nodevices
	      exec		      exec/noexec
	      readonly		      ro/rw
	      setuid		      setuid/nosetuid
	      xattr		      xattr/noxattr

       In addition, these options can be set on	a per-mount basis using	the -o
       option, without affecting the property that is stored on	disk. The val-
       ues specified on	the command line override the  values  stored  in  the
       dataset.	 The  -nosuid option is	an alias for nodevices,nosetuid. These
       properties are reported as "temporary" by the zfs get command.  If  the
       properties  are	changed	 while the dataset is mounted, the new setting
       overrides any temporary settings.

   User	Properties
       In addition to the standard native properties, ZFS  supports  arbitrary
       user  properties.  User	properties have	no effect on ZFS behavior, but
       applications or administrators can use them to annotate datasets	 (file
       systems,	volumes, and snapshots).

       User  property  names must contain a colon (:) character	to distinguish
       them from native	properties. They may contain lowercase	letters,  num-
       bers,  and  the	following punctuation characters: colon	(:), dash (-),
       period (.), and underscore (_). The expected  convention	 is  that  the
       property	name is	divided	into two portions such as module:property, but
       this namespace is not enforced by ZFS. User property names  can	be  at
       most 256	characters, and	cannot begin with a dash (-).

       When  making  programmatic  use of user properties, it is strongly sug-
       gested to use a reversed	DNS domain name	for the	 module	 component  of
       property	 names	to  reduce the chance that two independently-developed
       packages	use the	same property name for	different  purposes.  Property
       names beginning with com.sun. are reserved for use by Sun Microsystems.

       The values of user properties are arbitrary strings, are	always	inher-
       ited,  and  are	never  validated.  All of the commands that operate on
       properties (zfs list, zfs get, zfs set, and so forth) can  be  used  to
       manipulate  both	 native	 properties  and  user properties. Use the zfs
       inherit 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.

   ZFS Volumes as Swap or Dump Devices
       During an initial installation or a live	upgrade	from a UFS  file  sys-
       tem,  a	swap  device and dump device are created on ZFS	volumes	in the
       ZFS root	pool. By default, the swap area	size is	based on 1/2 the  size
       of  physical memory up to 2 Gbytes. The size of the dump	device depends
       on the kernel's requirements at installation time. Separate ZFS volumes
       must  be	used for the swap area and dump	devices. Do not	swap to	a file
       on a ZFS	file system. A ZFS swap	file configuration is not supported.

       If you need to change your swap area or dump device after the system is
       installed  or  upgraded,	 use the swap(1M) and dumpadm(1M) commands. If
       you need	to change the size of your swap	area or	dump device,  see  the
       Solaris ZFS Administration Guide.

SUBCOMMANDS
       All  subcommands	 that modify state are logged persistently to the pool
       in their	original form.

       zfs ?

	   Displays a help message.

       zfs create [-p] [-o property=value] ... filesystem

	   Creates a new ZFS file system. The  file  system  is	 automatically
	   mounted  according  to the "mountpoint" property inherited from the
	   parent.

	   -p

	       Creates all the non-existing parent datasets. Datasets  created
	       in  this	 manner	 are  automatically  mounted  according	to the
	       mountpoint property inherited from their	parent.	 Any  property
	       specified  on  the command line using the -o option is ignored.
	       If the target filesystem	already	 exists,  the  operation  com-
	       pletes successfully.

	   -o property=value

	       Sets  the  specified  property  as if the command zfs set prop-
	       erty=value was invoked at the same time the  dataset  was  cre-
	       ated.  Any  editable  ZFS  property can also be set at creation
	       time. Multiple -o options can be	specified. An error results if
	       the same	property is specified in multiple -o options.

       zfs create [-ps]	[-b blocksize] [-o property=value] ... -V size volume

	   Creates  a  volume  of  the given size. The volume is exported as a
	   block device	in /dev/zvol/{dsk,rdsk}/path, where path is  the  name
	   of the volume in the	ZFS namespace. The size	represents the logical
	   size	as exported by the device. By default, a reservation of	 equal
	   size	is created.

	   size	 is  automatically  rounded  up	 to  the nearest 128 Kbytes to
	   ensure that the volume has an integral number of blocks  regardless
	   of blocksize.

	   -p

	       Creates	all the	non-existing parent datasets. Datasets created
	       in this manner  are  automatically  mounted  according  to  the
	       mountpoint  property  inherited from their parent. Any property
	       specified on the	command	line using the -o option  is  ignored.
	       If  the	target	filesystem  already exists, the	operation com-
	       pletes successfully.

	   -s

	       Creates a sparse	volume with no reservation. See	volsize	in the
	       Native  Properties  section  for	 more information about	sparse
	       volumes.

	   -o property=value

	       Sets the	specified property as if the  zfs  set	property=value
	       command	was  invoked at	the same time the dataset was created.
	       Any editable ZFS	property can also be  set  at  creation	 time.
	       Multiple	 -o  options can be specified. An error	results	if the
	       same property is	specified in multiple -o options.

	   -b blocksize

	       Equivalent to -o	 volblocksize=blocksize.  If  this  option  is
	       specified  in  conjunction  with	-o volblocksize, the resulting
	       behavior	is undefined.

       zfs destroy [-rRf] filesystem|volume|snapshot

	   Destroys 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, snapshots, clones).

	   -r

	       Recursively  destroy  all children. If a	snapshot is specified,
	       destroy all snapshots with this name in	descendent  file  sys-
	       tems.

	   -R

	       Recursively  destroy all	dependents, including cloned file sys-
	       tems outside the	target hierarchy. If a snapshot	is  specified,
	       destroy	all  snapshots	with this name in descendent file sys-
	       tems.

	   -f

	       Force an	unmount	of any file systems using the unmount -f  com-
	       mand.  This  option  has	 no  effect  on	 non-file  systems  or
	       unmounted file systems.

	   Extreme care	should be taken	when applying either the -r or the  -f
	   options,  as	 they  can  destroy large portions of a	pool and cause
	   unexpected behavior for mounted file	systems	in use.

       zfs snapshot [-r] [-o property=value] ... filesystem@snapname|vol-
       ume@snapname

	   Creates  a snapshot with the	given name. All	previous modifications
	   by successful system	calls to the file system are part of the snap-
	   shot. See the "Snapshots" section for details.

	   -r

	       Recursively  create snapshots of	all descendent datasets. Snap-
	       shots are taken atomically, so  that  all  recursive  snapshots
	       correspond to the same moment in	time.

	   -o property=value

	       Sets the	specified property; see	zfs create for details.

       zfs rollback [-rRf] snapshot

	   Roll	 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	 snap-
	   shot	 other than the	most recent one. In order to do	so, all	inter-
	   mediate snapshots must be destroyed by specifying the -r option.

	   -r

	       Recursively destroy any snapshots  more	recent	than  the  one
	       specified.

	   -R

	       Recursively  destroy  any more recent snapshots,	as well	as any
	       clones of those snapshots.

	   -f

	       Used with the -R	option to force	an unmount of any  clone  file
	       systems that are	to be destroyed.

       zfs clone [-p] [-o property=value] ... snapshot filesystem|volume

	   Creates a clone of the given	snapshot. See the "Clones" section for
	   details. The	target dataset can be  located	anywhere  in  the  ZFS
	   hierarchy, and is created as	the same type as the original.

	   -p

	       Creates	all the	non-existing parent datasets. Datasets created
	       in this manner  are  automatically  mounted  according  to  the
	       mountpoint  property inherited from their parent. If the	target
	       filesystem or volume already exists,  the  operation  completes
	       successfully.

	   -o property=value

	       Sets the	specified property; see	zfs create for details.

       zfs promote clone-filesystem

	   Promotes a clone file system	to no longer be	dependent on its "ori-
	   gin"	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.

	   The	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 rename subcommand can be used to rename any
	   conflicting snapshots.

       zfs rename filesystem|volume|snapshot
       filesystem|volume|snapshot
       zfs rename [-p] filesystem|volume filesystem|volume

	   Renames the given dataset. The new target can be  located  anywhere
	   in  the  ZFS	 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.

	   -p

	       Creates all the nonexistent parent datasets.  Datasets  created
	       in  this	 manner	 are  automatically  mounted  according	to the
	       mountpoint property inherited from their	parent.

       zfs rename -r snapshot snapshot

	   Recursively rename the snapshots of all descendent datasets.	 Snap-
	   shots are the only dataset that can be renamed recursively.

       zfs list	[-r|-d depth] [-H] [-o property[,...]] [ -t type[,...]]	[ -s
       property	] ... [	-S property ] ... [filesystem|volume|snapshot] ...

	   Lists the property information for the given	 datasets  in  tabular
	   form.  If specified,	you can	list property information by the abso-
	   lute	pathname or the	relative pathname. By default, all  file  sys-
	   tems	 and  volumes  are  displayed.	Snapshots are displayed	if the
	   listsnaps property is on (the  default  is  off)  .	The  following
	   fields are displayed:

	     name,used,available,referenced,mountpoint

	   -H

	       Used  for  scripting  mode.  Do	not print headers and separate
	       fields by a single tab instead of arbitrary whitespace.

	   -r

	       Recursively display any children	of the dataset on the  command
	       line.

	   -d depth

	       Recursively  display  any children of the dataset, limiting the
	       recursion to depth. A depth of 1	will display only the  dataset
	       and its direct children.

	   -o property

	       A  comma-separated  list	of properties to display. The property
	       must be:

		   o	  one of the properties	described in the "Native Prop-
			  erties" section

		   o	  a user property

		   o	  the value name to display the	dataset	name

		   o	  the value space to display space usage properties on
			  file systems and volumes. This is a shortcut for:

			    -o name,avail,used,usedsnap,usedds,usedrefreserv,\
			    usedchild -t filesystem,volume

	   -s property

	       A property to use 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  name to sort by the	dataset	name. Multiple
	       properties can be specified at one time using multiple -s prop-
	       erty  options.  Multiple	 -s options are	evaluated from left to
	       right in	decreasing order of importance.

	       The following is	a list of sorting criteria:

		   o	  Numeric types	sort in	numeric	order.

		   o	  String types sort in alphabetical order.

		   o	  Types	inappropriate for a row	sort that row  to  the
			  literal  bottom,  regardless of the specified	order-
			  ing.

		   o	  If no	sorting	options	 are  specified	 the  existing
			  behavior of zfs list is preserved.

	   -S property

	       Same  as	 the  -s  option,  but sorts by	property in descending
	       order.

	   -t type

	       A comma-separated list of types to display, where type  is  one
	       of filesystem, snapshot , volume, or all. For example, specify-
	       ing -t snapshot displays	only snapshots.

       zfs set property=value filesystem|volume|snapshot ...

	   Sets	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 B, K,	M, G, T, P, E, Z  (for	bytes,
	   kilobytes, megabytes, gigabytes, terabytes, petabytes, exabytes, or
	   zettabytes, respectively). Properties cannot	be set on snapshots.

       zfs get [-r|-d depth] [-Hp] [-o field[,...] [-s source[,...] "all" |
       property[,...] filesystem|volume|snapshot ...

	   Displays  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:

		 name	   Dataset name
		  property  Property name
		  value	    Property value
		  source    Property source. Can either	be local, default,
			    temporary, inherited, or none (-).

	   All columns are displayed by	default, though	this can be controlled
	   by  using  the -o option. This command takes	a comma-separated list
	   of properties as described in the  "Native  Properties"  and	 "User
	   Properties" sections.

	   The	special	 value	all can	be used	to display all properties that
	   apply to the	given dataset's	type  (filesystem,  volume,  or	 snap-
	   shot).

	   -r

	       Recursively display properties for any children.

	   -d depth

	       Recursively  display  any children of the dataset, limiting the
	       recursion to depth. A depth of 1	will display only the  dataset
	       and its direct children.

	   -H

	       Display	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.

	   -o field

	       A  comma-separated  list	 of  columns  to  display.  name,prop-
	       erty,value,source is the	default	value.

	   -s source

	       A 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:  local,default,inher-
	       ited,temporary,none. The	default	value is all sources.

	   -p

	       Display numbers in parseable (exact) values.

       zfs inherit [-r]	property filesystem|volume|snapshot ...

	   Clears  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.

	   -r

	       Recursively inherit the given property for all children.

       zfs upgrade [-v]

	   Displays a list of file systems that	are not	the most  recent  ver-
	   sion.

       zfs upgrade [-r]	[-V version] [-a | filesystem]

	   Upgrades  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. zfs send streams generated from new
	   snapshots of	these file systems can not be accessed on systems run-
	   ning	older versions of the software.

	   The	file  system  version  is independent of the pool version (see
	   zpool(1M) for information on	the zpool upgrade command).

	   The file system version does	not have to be upgraded	when the  pool
	   version is upgraded,	and vice-versa.

	   -a

	       Upgrade all file	systems	on all imported	pools.

	   filesystem

	       Upgrade the specified file system.

	   -r

	       Upgrade	the specified file system and all descendent file sys-
	       tems

	   -V version

	       Upgrade to the specified	version. If the	-V flag	is not	speci-
	       fied,  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.

       zfs userspace [-niHp] [-o field[,...]] [-sS field]... [-t type [,...]]
       filesystem | snapshot

	   Displays  space consumed by,	and quotas on, each user in the	speci-
	   fied	filesystem or snapshot.	This corresponds to the	 userused@user
	   and userquota@user properties.

	   -n

	       Print numeric ID	instead	of user/group name.

	   -H

	       Do not print headers, use tab-delimited output.

	   -p

	       Use exact (parseable) numeric output.

	   -o field[,...]

	       Display only the	specified fields, from the following set:

		 type,name,used,quota

	       The default is to display all fields.

	   -s field

	       Sort  output  by	this field. The	s and S	flags may be specified
	       multiple	times to sort first by one field, then by another. The
	       default is:

		 -s type -s name

	   -S field

	       Sort by this field in reverse order. See	-s.

	   -t type[,...]

	       Print only the specified	types, from the	following set:

		 all,posixuser,smbuser,posixgroup,smbgroup

	       The default is:

		 -t posixuser,smbuser

	       ...but can be changed to	include	group types.

	   -i

	       Translate  SID to POSIX ID. The POSIX ID	may be ephemeral if no
	       mapping exists. Normal POSIX interfaces (for example,  stat(2),
	       ls  -l)	perform	 this translation, so the -i option allows the
	       output from zfs userspace to be compared	 directly  with	 those
	       utilities. However, -i may lead to confusion if some files were
	       created by an SMB user before a SMB-to-POSIX name  mapping  was
	       established.  In	 such  a case, some files are owned by the SMB
	       entity and some by the POSIX entity. However, he	-i option will
	       report  that the	POSIX entity has the total usage and quota for
	       both.

       zfs groupspace [-niHp] [-o field[,...]] [-sS field]... [-t type [,...]]
       filesystem | snapshot

	   Displays space consumed by, and quotas on, each group in the	speci-
	   fied	filesystem or snapshot.	This subcommand	is  identical  to  zfs
	   userspace, except that the default types to display are:

	     -t	posixgroup,smbgroup

       zfs mount

	   Displays all	ZFS file systems currently mounted.

       zfs mount [-vO] [-o options] -a | filesystem

	   Mounts  ZFS file systems. Invoked automatically as part of the boot
	   process.

	   -o options

	       An optional, comma-separated list of mount options to use  tem-
	       porarily	 for  the  duration  of	 the mount. See	the "Temporary
	       Mount Point Properties" section for details.

	   -O

	       Perform an overlay mount. See mount(1M) for more	information.

	   -v

	       Report mount progress.

	   -a

	       Mount all available ZFS file systems. Invoked automatically  as
	       part of the boot	process.

	   filesystem

	       Mount the specified filesystem.

       zfs unmount [-f]	-a | filesystem|mountpoint

	   Unmounts  currently mounted ZFS file	systems. Invoked automatically
	   as part of the shutdown process.

	   -f

	       Forcefully unmount the file system, even	if it is currently  in
	       use.

	   -a

	       Unmount	all  available ZFS file	systems. Invoked automatically
	       as part of the boot process.

	   filesystem|mountpoint

	       Unmount the specified filesystem. The command can also be given
	       a path to a ZFS file system mount point on the system.

       zfs share -a | filesystem

	   Shares available ZFS	file systems.

	   -a

	       Share  all available ZFS	file systems. Invoked automatically as
	       part of the boot	process.

	   filesystem

	       Share the specified filesystem according	to  the	 sharenfs  and
	       sharesmb	 properties. File systems are shared when the sharenfs
	       or sharesmb property is set.

       zfs unshare -a |	filesystem|mountpoint

	   Unshares currently shared ZFS file systems. This is	invoked	 auto-
	   matically as	part of	the shutdown process.

	   -a

	       Unshare	all  available ZFS file	systems. Invoked automatically
	       as part of the boot process.

	   filesystem|mountpoint

	       Unshare the specified filesystem. The command can also be given
	       a path to a ZFS file system shared on the system.

       zfs send	[-vR] [-[iI] snapshot] snapshot

	   Creates  a  stream  representation of the second snapshot, which is
	   written to standard output. The output can be redirected to a  file
	   or  to a different system (for example, using ssh(1). By default, a
	   full	stream is generated.

	   -i snapshot

	       Generate	an incremental stream from the first snapshot  to  the
	       second  snapshot.  The  incremental source (the first snapshot)
	       can be specified	as the last component  of  the	snapshot  name
	       (for  example,  the  part after the @), and it is assumed to be
	       from the	same file system as the	second snapshot.

	       If the destination is a clone, the source  may  be  the	origin
	       snapshot,   which   must	  be  fully  specified	(for  example,
	       pool/fs@origin, not just	@origin).

	   -I snapshot

	       Generate	a stream package that sends all	intermediary snapshots
	       from the	first snapshot to the second snapshot. For example, -I
	       @a fs@d is similar to -i	@a fs@b; -i @b fs@c; -i	@c  fs@d.  The
	       incremental  source  snapshot  may  be specified	as with	the -i
	       option.

	   -R

	       Generate	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.

	       If the -i or -I flags are used in conjunction with the -R 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  -F  flag  is
	       specified when this stream is received, snapshots and file sys-
	       tems that do not	exist on the sending side are destroyed.

	   -v

	       Print verbose information about the stream package generated.

	   The format of the stream is evolving. No backwards compatibility is
	   guaranteed.	You  may not be	able to	receive	your streams on	future
	   versions of ZFS.

       zfs receive [-vnFu] filesystem|volume|snapshot
       zfs receive [-vnFu] -d filesystem

	   Creates 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
	   zfs	send  subcommand,  which by default creates a full stream. zfs
	   recv	can be used as an alias	for zfs	receive.

	   If 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	zvols, the destination	device
	   link	 is  destroyed	and  recreated,	which means the	zvol cannot be
	   accessed during the receive operation.

	   The name of the snapshot (and file system,  if  a  full  stream  is
	   received) that this subcommand creates depends on the argument type
	   and the -d option.

	   If the argument is a	snapshot name, the specified snapshot is  cre-
	   ated.  If  the argument is a	file system or volume name, a snapshot
	   with	the same name as the sent snapshot is created within the spec-
	   ified  filesystem  or  volume.  If  the -d option is	specified, the
	   snapshot name is determined by appending the	sent  snapshot's  name
	   to  the  specified  filesystem.  If the -d option is	specified, any
	   required file systems within	the specified one are created.

	   -d

	       Use the name of the sent	snapshot to determine the name of  the
	       new snapshot as described in the	paragraph above.

	   -u

	       File  system that is associated with the	received stream	is not
	       mounted.

	   -v

	       Print  verbose  information  about  the	stream	and  the  time
	       required	to perform the receive operation.

	   -n

	       Do  not actually	receive	the stream. This can be	useful in con-
	       junction	with the -v option to  verify  the  name  the  receive
	       operation would use.

	   -F

	       Force a rollback	of the file system to the most recent snapshot
	       before performing the receive operation.	If receiving an	incre-
	       mental  replication  stream  (for example, one generated	by zfs
	       send -R -[iI]), destroy snapshots and file systems that do  not
	       exist on	the sending side.

       zfs allow filesystem | volume

	   Displays  permissions  that	have  been  delegated on the specified
	   filesystem or volume. See the other forms of	 zfs  allow  for  more
	   information.

       zfs allow [-ldug] "everyone"|user|group[,...] perm|@setname[,...]
       filesystem| volume
       zfs allow [-ld] -e perm|@setname[,...] filesystem | volume

	   Delegates ZFS administration	permission for	the  file  systems  to
	   non-privileged users.

	   [-ug] "everyone"|user|group[,...]

	       Specifies to whom the permissions are delegated.	Multiple enti-
	       ties can	be specified as	a comma-separated list.	If neither  of
	       the -ug 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 -u or -g options. To	specify	a  group  with
	       the same	name as	a user,	use the	-g options.

	   [-e]	perm|@setname[,...]

	       Specifies that the permissions be delegated to "everyone." Mul-
	       tiple permissions may be	specified as a	comma-separated	 list.
	       Permission  names  are  the same	as ZFS subcommand and property
	       names. See the property list below. Property set	 names,	 which
	       begin  with  an	"at sign" ("@")	, may be specified. See	the -s
	       form below for details.

	   [-ld] filesystem|volume

	       Specifies where the permissions are delegated.  If  neither  of
	       the  -ld	 options  are specified, or both are, then the permis-
	       sions are allowed for the file system or	volume,	and all	of its
	       descendents.  If	 only  the  -l option is used, then is allowed
	       "locally" only for the specified	file system. If	 only  the  -d
	       option  is  used,  then is allowed only for the descendent file
	       systems.

       Permissions are generally the ability to	use a ZFS subcommand or	change
       a ZFS property. The following permissions are available:

	 NAME	      TYPE	   NOTES
	 allow	      subcommand   Must	also have the permission
				    that is being allowed.
	 clone	      subcommand   Must	also have the 'create' ability
				    and	the 'mount' ability in the origin
				    file system.
	 create	      subcommand   Must	also have the 'mount' ability.
	 destroy      subcommand   Must	also have the 'mount' ability.
	 mount	      subcommand   Allows mount, unmount, and
				    create/remove zvol device links.
	 promote      subcommand   Must	also have the 'mount' ability and
				    'promote' ability in the origin file system.
	 receive      subcommand   Must	also have the 'mount' ability and
				    the	'create' ability.
	 rename	      subcommand   Must	also have the 'mount' ability and
				    the	'create' ability in the	new parent.
	 rollback     subcommand   Must	also have the 'mount' ability.
	 snapshot     subcommand   Must	also have the 'mount' ability.
	 share	      subcommand   Allows share	and unshare.
	 send	      subcommand

	 aclinherit	  property
	 aclmode	  property
	 atime		  property
	 canmount	  property
	 casesensitivity  property
	 checksum	  property
	 compression	  property
	 copies		  property
	 devices	  property
	 exec		  property
	 groupquota	  other	     Allows accessing any groupquota@... property.
	 groupused	  other	     Allows reading any	groupused@... property.
	 mountpoint	  property
	 nbmand		  property
	 normalization	  property
	 primarycache	  property
	 quota		  property
	 readonly	  property
	 recordsize	  property
	 refquota	  property
	 refreservation	  property
	 reservation	  property
	 secondarycache	  property
	 setuid		  property
	 shareiscsi	  property
	 sharenfs	  property
	 sharesmb	  property
	 snapdir	  property
	 utf8only	  property
	 userprop	  other	     Allows changing any user property.
	 userquota	  other	     Allows accessing any userquota@...	 property.
	 userused	  other	     Allows reading any	userused@... property.
	 version	  property
	 volblocksize	  property
	 volsize	  property
	 vscan		  property
	 xattr		  property
	 zoned		  property
	 userprop	  other	       Allows changing any user	property.

       zfs allow -c perm|@setname[,...]	filesystem|volume

	   Sets	 "create  time"	 permissions.  These  permissions  are granted
	   (locally) to	the creator of any newly-created descendent file  sys-
	   tem.

       zfs allow -s @setname perm|@setname[,...] filesystem|volume

	   Defines  or	adds  permissions  to a	permission set.	The set	can be
	   used	by other zfs allow 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 nam-
	   ing	restrictions as	ZFS file systems, but the name must begin with
	   an "at sign"	(@), and can be	no more	than 64	characters long.

       zfs unallow [-rldug] "everyone"|user|group[,...]	[perm|@setname[, ...]]
       filesystem|volume
       zfs unallow [-rld] -e [perm|@setname [,...]] filesystem|volume
       zfs unallow [-r]	-c [perm|@setname[,...]]
       filesystem|volume

	   Removes  permissions	 that were granted with	the zfs	allow 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 user, group, or everyone are removed. Specifying
	   "everyone" (or using	the -e option) only  removes  the  permissions
	   that	were granted to	"everyone", not	all permissions	for every user
	   and group. See the zfs allow	 command  for  a  description  of  the
	   -ldugec options.

	   -r

	       Recursively  remove  the	 permissions from this file system and
	       all descendents.

       zfs unallow [-r]	-s @setname [perm|@setname[,...]]
       filesystem|volume

	   Removes permissions from a permission set. If  no  permissions  are
	   specified,  then all	permissions are	removed, thus removing the set
	   entirely.

EXAMPLES
       Example 1 Creating a ZFS	File System Hierarchy

       The following commands create a file system named pool/home and a  file
       system named pool/home/bob. The mount point /export/home	is set for the
       parent file system, and automatically inherited by the child file  sys-
       tem.

	 # zfs create pool/home
	 # zfs set mountpoint=/export/home pool/home
	 # zfs create pool/home/bob

       Example 2 Creating a ZFS	Snapshot

       The following command creates a snapshot	named yesterday. This snapshot
       is mounted on demand in the .zfs/snapshot directory at the root of  the
       pool/home/bob file system.

	 # zfs snapshot	pool/home/bob@yesterday

       Example 3 Taking	and Destroying Multiple	Snapshots

       The  following  command	creates	snapshots named	yesterday of pool/home
       and all of its descendent file systems. Each  snapshot  is  mounted  on
       demand  in  the .zfs/snapshot directory at the root of its file system.
       The second command destroys the newly created snapshots.

	 # zfs snapshot	-r pool/home@yesterday
	 # zfs destroy -r pool/home@yesterday

       Example 4 Turning Off Compression

       The following commands turn compression off for all file	systems	 under
       pool/home, but explicitly turns it on for pool/home/anne.

	 # zfs set compression=off pool/home
	 # zfs set compression=on pool/home/anne

       Example 5 Listing ZFS Datasets

       The  following command lists all	active file systems and	volumes	in the
       system. Snapshots are displayed if the listsnaps	property  is  on  (the
       default	is  off)  . See	zpool(1M) for more information on pool proper-
       ties.

	 # zfs list

	    NAME		      USED  AVAIL  REFER  MOUNTPOINT
	    pool		      450K   457G    18K  /pool
	    pool/home		      315K   457G    21K  /export/home
	    pool/home/anne	       18K   457G    18K  /export/home/anne
	    pool/home/bob	      276K   457G   276K  /export/home/bob

       Example 6 Setting a Quota on a ZFS File System

       The following command sets a quota of 50	Gbytes for pool/home/bob.

	 # zfs set quota=50G pool/home/bob

       Example 7 Listing ZFS Properties

       The following command lists all properties for pool/home/bob.

	 # zfs get all pool/home/bob

	 NAME		PROPERTY	      VALUE		     SOURCE
	 pool/home/bob	type		      filesystem	     -
	 pool/home/bob	creation	      Thu Jul 12 14:44 2007  -
	 pool/home/bob	used		      276K		     -
	 pool/home/bob	available	      50.0G		     -
	 pool/home/bob	referenced	      276K		     -
	 pool/home/bob	compressratio	      1.00x		     -
	 pool/home/bob	mounted		      yes		     -
	 pool/home/bob	quota		      50G		     local
	 pool/home/bob	reservation	      none		     default
	 pool/home/bob	recordsize	      128K		     default
	 pool/home/bob	mountpoint	      /export/home/bob	     inherited
								     from
								     pool/home
	 pool/home/bob	sharenfs	      off		     default
	 pool/home/bob	checksum	      on		     default
	 pool/home/bob	compression	      off		     default
	 pool/home/bob	atime		      on		     default
	 pool/home/bob	devices		      on		     default
	 pool/home/bob	exec		      on		     default
	 pool/home/bob	setuid		      on		     default
	 pool/home/bob	readonly	      off		     default
	 pool/home/bob	zoned		      off		     default
	 pool/home/bob	snapdir		      hidden		     default
	 pool/home/bob	aclmode		      groupmask		     default
	 pool/home/bob	aclinherit	      restricted	     default
	 pool/home/bob	canmount	      on		     default
	 pool/home/bob	shareiscsi	      off		     default
	 pool/home/bob	xattr		      on		     default
	 pool/home/bob	copies		      1			     default
	 pool/home/bob	version		      1			     -
	 pool/home/bob	utf8only	      off		     -
	 pool/home/bob	normalization	      none		     -
	 pool/home/bob	casesensitivity	      sensitive		     -
	 pool/home/bob	vscan		      off		     default
	 pool/home/bob	nbmand		      off		     default
	 pool/home/bob	sharesmb	      off		     default
	 pool/home/bob	refquota	      10M		     local
	 pool/home/bob	refreservation	      none		     default
	 pool/home/bob	primarycache	      all		     default
	 pool/home/bob	secondarycache	      a			     default
	 pool/home/bob	usedbysnapshots	      0			     -
	 pool/home/bob	usedbydataset	      18K		     -
	 pool/home/bob	usedbychildren	      0			     -
	 pool/home/bob	usedbyrefreservation  0			     -

       The following command gets a single property value.

	 # zfs get -H -o value compression pool/home/bob
	 on

       The following command lists all	properties  with  local	 settings  for
       pool/home/bob.

	 # zfs get -r -s local -o name,property,value all pool/home/bob

	    NAME	     PROPERTY	   VALUE
	    pool	     compression   on
	    pool/home	     checksum	   off

       Example 8 Rolling Back a	ZFS File System

       The  following  command	reverts	 the contents of pool/home/anne	to the
       snapshot	named yesterday, deleting all intermediate snapshots.

	 # zfs rollback	-r pool/home/anne@yesterday

       Example 9 Creating a ZFS	Clone

       The following command creates a writable	file system whose initial con-
       tents are the same as pool/home/bob@yesterday.

	 # zfs clone pool/home/bob@yesterday pool/clone

       Example 10 Promoting a ZFS Clone

       The  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:

	 # zfs create pool/project/production
	   populate /pool/project/production with data
	 # zfs snapshot	pool/project/production@today
	 # zfs clone pool/project/production@today pool/project/beta
	 make changes to /pool/project/beta and	test them
	 # zfs promote pool/project/beta
	 # zfs rename pool/project/production pool/project/legacy
	 # zfs rename pool/project/beta	pool/project/production
	 once the legacy version is no longer needed, it can be	destroyed
	 # zfs destroy pool/project/legacy

       Example 11 Inheriting ZFS Properties

       The  following  command	causes	pool/home/bob  and  pool/home/anne  to
       inherit the checksum property from their	parent.

	 # zfs inherit checksum	pool/home/bob pool/home/anne

       Example 12 Remotely Replicating ZFS Data

       The following commands send a  full  stream  and	 then  an  incremental
       stream  to a remote machine, restoring them into	poolB/received/fs@aand
       poolB/received/fs@b, respectively. poolB	must contain the  file	system
       poolB/received, and must	not initially contain poolB/received/fs.

	 # zfs send pool/fs@a |	\
	    ssh	host zfs receive poolB/received/fs@a
	 # zfs send -i a pool/fs@b | ssh host \
	    zfs	receive	poolB/received/fs

       Example 13 Using	the receive -d Option

       The  following  command	sends a	full stream of poolA/fsA/fsB@snap to a
       remote machine,	receiving  it  into  poolB/received/fsA/fsB@snap.  The
       fsA/fsB@snap portion of the received snapshot's name is determined from
       the name	of the sent snapshot.  poolB  must  contain  the  file	system
       poolB/received.	If poolB/received/fsA does not exist, it is created as
       an empty	file system.

	 # zfs send poolA/fsA/fsB@snap | \
	    ssh	host zfs receive -d poolB/received

       Example 14 Setting User Properties

       The following  example  sets  the  user-defined	com.example:department
       property	for a dataset.

	 # zfs set com.example:department=12345	tank/accounting

       Example 15 Creating a ZFS Volume	as an iSCSI Target Device

       The following example shows how to create a ZFS volume as an iSCSI tar-
       get.

	 # zfs create -V 2g pool/volumes/vol1
	 # zfs set shareiscsi=on pool/volumes/vol1
	 # iscsitadm list target
	 Target: pool/volumes/vol1
	  iSCSI	Name:
	  iqn.1986-03.com.sun:02:7b4b02a6-3277-eb1b-e686-a24762c52a8c
	  Connections: 0

       After the iSCSI target is created, set up the iSCSI initiator. For more
       information about the Solaris iSCSI initiator, see iscsitadm(1M).

       Example 16 Performing a Rolling Snapshot

       The 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:

	 # zfs destroy -r pool/users@7daysago
	 # zfs rename -r pool/users@6daysago @7daysago
	 # zfs rename -r pool/users@5daysago @6daysago
	 # zfs rename -r pool/users@yesterday @5daysago
	 # zfs rename -r pool/users@yesterday @4daysago
	 # zfs rename -r pool/users@yesterday @3daysago
	 # zfs rename -r pool/users@yesterday @2daysago
	 # zfs rename -r pool/users@today @yesterday
	 # zfs snapshot	-r pool/users@today

       Example 17 Setting sharenfs Property Options on a ZFS File System

       The following commands show how to set  sharenfs	 property  options  to
       enable  rw  access  for a set of	IP addresses and to enable root	access
       for system neo on the tank/home file system.

	 # # zfs set sharenfs='rw=@123.123.0.0/16,root=neo' tank/home

       If you are using	DNS for	host name resolution, specify the fully	quali-
       fied hostname.

       Example 18 Delegating ZFS Administration	Permissions on a ZFS Dataset

       The  following example shows how	to set permissions so that user	cindys
       can create, destroy, mount, and take snapshots on tank/cindys. The per-
       missions	on tank/cindys are also	displayed.

	 # # zfs allow cindys create,destroy,mount,snapshot tank/cindys
	 # zfs allow tank/cindys
	 -------------------------------------------------------------
	 Local+Descendent permissions on (tank/cindys)
		   user	cindys create,destroy,mount,snapshot
	 -------------------------------------------------------------

       Because	the  tank/cindys  mount	 point	permission  is	set  to	755 by
       default,	user cindys  will  be  unable  to  mount  file	systems	 under
       tank/cindys.  Set  an  ACL  similar  to the following syntax to provide
       mount point access:

	 # chmod A+user:cindys:add_subdirectory:allow /tank/cindys

       Example 19 Delegating Create Time Permissions on	a ZFS Dataset

       The following example shows how to grant	anyone in the group  staff  to
       create  file  systems in	tank/users. This syntax	also allows staff mem-
       bers to destroy their own file systems, but not destroy	anyone	else's
       file system. The	permissions on tank/users are also displayed.

	 # # zfs allow staff create,mount tank/users
	 # zfs allow -c	destroy	tank/users
	 # zfs allow tank/users
	 -------------------------------------------------------------
	 Create	time permissions on (tank/users)
		   create,destroy
	 Local+Descendent permissions on (tank/users)
		   group staff create,mount
	 -------------------------------------------------------------

       Example 20 Defining and Granting	a Permission Set on a ZFS Dataset

       The following example shows how to define and grant a permission	set on
       the tank/users file system. The permissions on tank/users are also dis-
       played.

	 # zfs allow -s	@pset create,destroy,snapshot,mount tank/users
	 # zfs allow staff @pset tank/users
	 # zfs allow tank/users
	 -------------------------------------------------------------
	 Permission sets on (tank/users)
		 @pset create,destroy,mount,snapshot
	 Create	time permissions on (tank/users)
		 create,destroy
	 Local+Descendent permissions on (tank/users)
		 group staff @pset,create,mount
	 -------------------------------------------------------------

       Example 21 Delegating Property Permissions on a ZFS Dataset

       The  following  example	shows  to  grant the ability to	set quotas and
       reservations  on	 the  users/home  file	system.	 The  permissions   on
       users/home are also displayed.

	 # zfs allow cindys quota,reservation users/home
	 # zfs allow users/home
	 -------------------------------------------------------------
	 Local+Descendent permissions on (users/home)
		 user cindys quota,reservation
	 -------------------------------------------------------------
	 cindys% zfs set quota=10G users/home/marks
	 cindys% zfs get quota users/home/marks
	 NAME		   PROPERTY  VALUE	       SOURCE
	 users/home/marks  quota     10G	       local

       Example 22 Removing ZFS Delegated Permissions on	a ZFS Dataset

       The  following example shows how	to remove the snapshot permission from
       the staff group on the  tank/users  file	 system.  The  permissions  on
       tank/users are also displayed.

	 # zfs unallow staff snapshot tank/users
	 # zfs allow tank/users
	 -------------------------------------------------------------
	 Permission sets on (tank/users)
		 @pset create,destroy,mount,snapshot
	 Create	time permissions on (tank/users)
		 create,destroy
	 Local+Descendent permissions on (tank/users)
		 group staff @pset,create,mount
	 -------------------------------------------------------------

EXIT STATUS
       The following exit values are returned:

       0

	   Successful completion.

       1

	   An error occurred.

       2

	   Invalid command line	options	were specified.

ATTRIBUTES
       See attributes(5) for descriptions of the following attributes:

       +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+
       |      ATTRIBUTE	TYPE	     |	    ATTRIBUTE VALUE	   |
       +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+
       |Availability		     |SUNWzfsu			   |
       +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+
       |Interface Stability	     |Committed			   |
       +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+

SEE ALSO
       ssh(1), iscsitadm(1M), mount(1M), share(1M), sharemgr(1M), unshare(1M),
       zonecfg(1M),  zpool(1M),	 chmod(2),   stat(2),	write(2),   fsync(3C),
       dfstab(4), attributes(5)

       See  the	gzip(1)	man page, which	is not part of the SunOS man page col-
       lection.

       For information about using the ZFS web-based management	tool and other
       ZFS features, see the Solaris ZFS Administration	Guide.

SunOS 5.11			  5 May	2009			       zfs(1M)

NAME | SYNOPSIS | DESCRIPTION | SUBCOMMANDS | EXAMPLES | EXIT STATUS | ATTRIBUTES | SEE ALSO

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