Comment on Proxmox Disk Performance Problems
pyrosis@lemmy.world 6 months agoIt looks like you could also do a zpool upgrade. This will just upgrade your legacy pools to the newer zfs version. That command is fairly simple to run from terminal if you are already examining the pool.
SeeJayEmm@lemmy.procrastinati.org 6 months ago
I’ve done a bit of research on that and I believe upgrading the zpool would make my system unbootable.
pyrosis@lemmy.world 6 months ago
Upgrading a ZFS pool itself shouldn’t make a system unbootable even if an rpool (root pool) exists on it.
That could only happen if the upgrade took a shit during a power outage or something like that. The upgrade itself usually only takes a few seconds from the command line.
If it makes you feel better I upgraded mine with an rpool on it and it was painless. I do have a everything backed up tho so I rarely worry. However ai understand being hesitant.
SeeJayEmm@lemmy.procrastinati.org 6 months ago
I’m referring to this.
Unless I’m misunderstanding the guidance.
pyrosis@lemmy.world 6 months ago
It looks like you are using legacy bios. mine is using uefi with a zfs rpool
However, like with everything a method always exists to get it done. Or not if you are concerned.
If you are interested it would look like…
Pool Upgrade
sudo zpool upgrade <pool_name>
Confirm Upgrade
Refresh boot config
Confirm Boot configuration
cat /boot/grub/grub.cfg
You are looking for directives like this to see if they are indeed pointing at your existing rpool
root=ZFS=rpool/ROOT/pve-1 boot=zfs quiet
here is my file if it helps you compare…
You can see the lines by the linux sections.