How This Book Is Organized
The following table describes the chapters in this book.
| Chapter | Description | 
|---|
| Chapter 1, Solaris ZFS File System (Introduction) | Provides an overview of
ZFS and its features and benefits. It also covers some basic concepts and
terminology. | 
| Chapter 2, Getting Started With ZFS | Provides step-by-step instructions on setting up simple ZFS configurations with simple pools and
file systems. This chapter also provides the hardware and software required to create
ZFS file systems. | 
| Chapter 3, ZFS and Traditional File System Differences | Identifies important features that make ZFS significantly different from traditional file
systems. Understanding these key differences will help reduce confusion when using traditional tools
to interact with ZFS. | 
| Chapter 4, Managing ZFS Storage Pools | Provides a detailed description of how to create and
administer storage pools. | 
| Chapter 5, Managing ZFS File Systems | Provides detailed information about managing ZFS file systems. Included are such concepts
as hierarchical file system layout, property inheritance, and automatic mount point management and
share interactions. | 
| Chapter 6, Working With ZFS Snapshots and Clones | Describes how to create and administer ZFS snapshots and clones. | 
| Chapter 7, Using ACLs to Protect ZFS Files | Describes how
to use access control lists (ACLs) to protect your ZFS files by providing
more granular permissions then the standard UNIX permissions. | 
| Chapter 9, ZFS Advanced Topics | Provides information on using ZFS
volumes, using ZFS on a Solaris system with zones installed, and alternate root
pools. | 
| Chapter 10, ZFS Troubleshooting and Data Recovery | Describes how to identify ZFS failure modes and how to recover from them.
Steps for preventing failures are covered as well. |