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Apple Confirms No (Default) ZFS In Leopard

javipas writes "Despite recent rumors about the possible inclusion of ZFS as the filesystem of choice for MacOS X 10.5 'Leopard', an Apple executive has denied this possibility. Brian Croll, senior director of product marketing for the Mac OS has as much as said 'ZFS is not happening ... Croll declined to comment on statements made last week by Sun Chief Executive Jonathan Schwartz, who said the use of ZFS would be announced at the Apple Worldwide Developers Conference in San Francisco. Upon further questioning, Croll would only confirm that Apple had never said ZFS would be a part of Leopard. A representative with Sun did not have any immediate comment.' Users of the future operating system will have to keep working with HFS+, a filesystem that is almost ten years old now." Update: 06/12 19:57 GMT by KD : An Apple spokesman contacted InformationWeek with a correction, which they ran as a comment on their original story: What Apple meant to say was, "ZFS would be available as a limited option, but not as the default file system."

37 of 362 comments (clear)

  1. Haven't you learned anything Sun? by dthirteen · · Score: 4, Funny

    Nobody scoops Steve Jobs...

    1. Re:Haven't you learned anything Sun? by Raindance · · Score: 5, Interesting

      I agree.

      Jonathan *had* to know he might get burned for spilling the beans before Steve. Jobs has a track record of being harsh, almost vindictive in his dealings with companies which betray his trust.

      Exhibit A: Samsung runs their mouth about being selected to supply software to drive the next-gen iPod Nano. Apple turns around and drops them.

      Exhibit B: ATI runs their mouth about some specs for new macs before Macworld. Apple removes ATI boards from their computers and refuses to offer them as a build-to-order.

      Simply put, don't try to scoop The Steve.

    2. Re:Haven't you learned anything Sun? by TheWizardTim · · Score: 5, Interesting

      When I worked for Apple, at 6am ATI let slip that they were making cards for The PowerMac and "something else". That "something else" was the cube. My boss got a call about 5 minutes later from Steve telling us to remove all references to ATI on all web pages, in 17 languages, by 9am.

    3. Re:Haven't you learned anything Sun? by Reality+Master+101 · · Score: 5, Interesting

      ATI runs their mouth about some specs for new macs before Macworld. Apple removes ATI boards from their computers and refuses to offer them as a build-to-order.

      Which really underscores the stupidity of Steve's arrogance. I'm sure ATI wanted that contract, it was a nice contract, but Apple is NOTHING in the great scheme of the PC market. And there aren't that many major players in the high-end graphic chip game. Why play the prima donna, when he might have to deal with them in the future?

      --
      Sometimes it's best to just let stupid people be stupid.
    4. Re:Haven't you learned anything Sun? by jeffasselin · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Probably from where there's "No child left behind".

      --
      If he explores all forms and substances Straight homeward to their symbol-essences; He shall not die.
    5. Re:Haven't you learned anything Sun? by 99BottlesOfBeerInMyF · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Which really underscores the stupidity of Steve's arrogance.

      Yeah, because Apple stock is so low compared to when he took charge.

      I'm sure ATI wanted that contract, it was a nice contract, but Apple is NOTHING in the great scheme of the PC market.

      Let's see, Apple is about 5% of the graphics card market share. ATI has about 25% of the market right now, so they would represent a 20% increase in sales for ATI, hmmm, I think that might be worth a little bit of work to get the contract. Gee what do we have to do to manage such a contract... not violate our confidentiality agreement, that does sound pretty hard.

      And there aren't that many major players in the high-end graphic chip game.

      There are enough so that Apple has a few choices.

      Why play the prima donna, when he might have to deal with them in the future?

      If people violate your trust and undermine your market position, why would you keep doing business with them? If, at some point in the future Apple does do business with ATI again, do you think ATI will take keeping things confidential seriously or do you think they'll stupidly lose a giant contract while gaining nothing again? What about all of Apple's other suppliers for components? Do you think they will take confidentiality seriously? By punishing ATI, Apple showed they were serious and would not put up with that kind of stupidity. Now their statements to suppliers are credible instead of hot air.

    6. Re:Haven't you learned anything Sun? by adisakp · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I predicted this a week ago:

      PREVIOUS POST

    7. Re:Haven't you learned anything Sun? by moderatorrater · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Yeah, because Apple stock is so low compared to when he took charge. Nice fallacious argument. Jobs has done well with the company, but that doesn't mean his arrogance hasn't hurt the company or that the arrogance is stupid. There's no doubt that Steve Jobs has been a great asset, but that doesn't mean he's above criticism (or SEC regulations).
    8. Re:Haven't you learned anything Sun? by htakashiro · · Score: 4, Funny

      I think Jobs kinda knows what he's doing. We're the ones posting on Slashdot.

    9. Re:Haven't you learned anything Sun? by duffbeer703 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Yeah, because Apple stock is so low compared to when he took charge.

      Hubris often leads to poor decisions. An arrogant prick who is always right is a hero -- until he's wrong.

      Jobs has done alot of great stuff -- he's a visionary who has beaten cancer and grown an amazing company at the same time. That doesn't mean that he's infallible. The obsession with secrecy costs Apple alot of business -- there are today enterprises that would purchase thousands of Macs, but the needless obsession with secrecy and refusal to listen to some customer desires hurts the company in the long run.

      --
      Conformity is the jailer of freedom and enemy of growth. -JFK
  2. Wow, 10 years old?! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    Too bad NTFS is almost 15, and I heard FAT stopped counting (because of a technical limitation).

    1. Re:Wow, 10 years old?! by Megane · · Score: 3, Informative

      ...and HFS+ is just an incremental update from HFS - adding stuff like journaling and support for larger drives, long unicode file names, and some unixisms like inodes and /dev and hard links and case sensitivity.

      So you can really say that HFS+ is almost 22 years old now.

      --
      #naabhaprzrag, #sverubfr-000, #agi-fcbafberq, negvpyr[pynff*=' negvpyr-ary-'] { qvfcynl: abar !vzcbegnag; }
    2. Re:Wow, 10 years old?! by bheading · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Why is the fact that it is "old" considered to be a problem ? Anyone who thinks new=good, old=bad is way out of step.

      Far better to talk about what features it lacks. Or if you're trying to defend it, talk about its stability record. Have filesystems really advanced, since journalling became the standard way to do things, in any specific way that benefits regular users ?

  3. Ooookaaaay... by gentlemen_loser · · Score: 5, Insightful

    "Users of the future operating system will have to keep working with HFS+, a filesystem that is almost ten years old now."

    Yes, because a file system is something that should definitely be re-designed every two years or so. You know, just to stay "current"...

    1. Re:Ooookaaaay... by seebs · · Score: 4, Funny

      You have a point. I guess I'm just used to assuming that the thing at the end which makes no sense comes from Zonk. :)

      --
      My blog: http://www.seebs.net/log/ --- My iPhone/iPad app: http://www.seebs.net/seebsfrac/
  4. Senior Director of Product Marketing by lbmouse · · Score: 5, Funny

    Why do reporters insist on interviewing marketing goons to uncover tech specs? This guy probably thought the reporter was asking if Leopard was going to include Zurich Financial Services.

  5. Retribution by earnest+murderer · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I'm not saying this is retailatory... But this wouldn't be the first time Apple has gone out of it's way to punish partners for making preemptive announcements about Apples products. One may recall not too many years ago ATI making a show about Apple using their video cards just before another WWDC (maybe it was Macworld, I forget). Apple proceeded to spend the night pulling ATI's cards from their ready to ship Macs. In keynote the following morning Steve Jobs announced (surely with ATI execs in the front row) that nVidia was their premier partner for Mac video. It has been said that it was 6 monts before ATI execs could get even an executive secretary on the phone.

    --
    Platform advocacy is like choosing a favorite severely developmentally disabled child.
    1. Re:Retribution by Trillan · · Score: 4, Insightful

      For the sake of argument, how would it have sounded different if Apple just had never planned on shipping ZFS as the defualt file system?

    2. Re:Retribution by Bassman59 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I'm not saying this is retailatory... But this wouldn't be the first time Apple has gone out of it's way to punish partners for making preemptive announcements about Apples products. One may recall not too many years ago ATI making a show about Apple using their video cards just before another WWDC (maybe it was Macworld, I forget). Apple proceeded to spend the night pulling ATI's cards from their ready to ship Macs.

      This really doesn't make any sense. Why would Apple have had tens of thousands of nVidia cards, something that otherwise they wouldn't be using, just sitting around?

    3. Re:Retribution by danpsmith · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I'm not saying this is retailatory... But this wouldn't be the first time Apple has gone out of it's way to punish partners for making preemptive announcements about Apples products. One may recall not too many years ago ATI making a show about Apple using their video cards just before another WWDC (maybe it was Macworld, I forget). Apple proceeded to spend the night pulling ATI's cards from their ready to ship Macs. In keynote the following morning Steve Jobs announced (surely with ATI execs in the front row) that nVidia was their premier partner for Mac video. It has been said that it was 6 monts before ATI execs could get even an executive secretary on the phone.

      If this is simply retaliatory and not a readiness issue, then Apple is seriously undermining its own products in favor of PR. The truth of the matter is that it doesn't much matter if Samsung coded solutions for Apple or someone else did it, and it didn't particularly matter if ATI made the video cards or Nvidia, these companies can be switched out rather interchangeably. However, ZFS is a giant step forward in file systems and has loads more features than anything else, ripping it out just because they "spilled the beans" would be babyish and hostile. Any logical mind would reason that this isn't an apples-to-apples comparison of retaliation as there's no similar vendor. It's most likely a readiness issue.

      --
      Judges and senates have been bought for gold; Esteem and love were never to be sold.
  6. Err...no he didn't. by mccalli · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The TFA says:

    "Croll declined to comment on statements made last week by Sun Chief Executive Jonathan Schwartz, who said the use of ZFS would be announced at the Apple Worldwide Developers Conference in San Francisco. Upon further questioning, Croll would only confirm that Apple had never said ZFS would be a part of Leopard."

    That reads like "would neither confirm nor deny to our reporter" to me, not "has denied".

    Cheers,
    Ian

    1. Re:Err...no he didn't. by Overly+Critical+Guy · · Score: 3, Informative
      From the article:

      During an interview with InformationWeek, Brian Croll, senior director of product marketing for the Mac OS, said, "ZFS is not happening," when asked whether Sun's Zettabyte File System would be in Leopard. Instead, Leopard would use Apple's current hierarchical file system, called HFS+. The Apple file system was first introduced in 1998 in Mac OS 8.0.


      What he declined to comment on was the comment made by the Sun executive, but he did comment on ZFS itself.
      --
      "Sufferin' succotash."
  7. ZFS looks great but. by LWATCDR · · Score: 3, Interesting

    It is really better for servers than a Workstation. It uses a lot of CPU power and adds features that no Workstation is likely to need for a while. It would be ideal for a NAS so maybe we will see it as an option on storage product from Apple.

    --
    See my blog http://ilovecookes.blogspot.com/ for light hearted technical information.
  8. Re:Mac OS X Leopard by Slashcrap · · Score: 5, Insightful

    It even goes so far as to allow 64-bit apps without a 32-bit binary to run in 32-bit mode transparently, which is unprecedented thus far.

    Almost as unprecedented as a Mac zealot making hilariously inaccurate technical claims because they simply don't understand what they're talking about, but don't see that a justification for keeping their mouths shut.

    Come October, Mac OS X will serve everyone with one price, one version, one install: one vision of simple 64-bit desktop goodness.

    I made a deal with a hitman. If I ever fall in love with a company to that extent he's going to come round and shoot me in the face. I find it a more palatable option than allowing myself to become a PR spewing corporate cocksucker.

  9. Notes from a WWDC curmudgeon by hkb · · Score: 5, Informative

    ZFS is in the WWDC Leopard build. It's currently configured for read-only, although full functionality is in there. Write ability is disabled for stability/integrity issues. /System/Library/Extensions:

    drwxr-xr-x 3 root wheel 102 Jun 4 20:48 zfs.readonly.kext

    --
    /* Moderating all non-anonymous trolls up since 2004 */
    1. Re:Notes from a WWDC curmudgeon by VWJedi · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Considering all the talk about how Apple retalliates against people who cross them, don't you think you out to abide by the Non-Disclosure Agreement you entered into when you received that Leopard build?

  10. A new iChat?? by Disoriented · · Score: 3, Interesting
    Not sure if anyone noticed, but a major feature that was promised for iChat in Leopard has somehow disappeared.

    From the Leopard Sneak Peak, still in Google's cache here

    Share and share alike

    Remote control takes on a whole new meaning with iChat in Leopard. Thanks to iChat Screen Sharing, you and your buddy can observe and control a single desktop via iChat, making it a cinch to collaborate with colleagues, browse the Web with a friend, or pick the perfect plane seats with your spouse. Share your own desktop or share your buddy's -- you both have complete control at all times. And when you start a Screen Sharing session, iChat automatically initiates an audio chat so you can talk things through while you're at it.


    However, there is no mention of iChat Desktop sharing on Apple's new iChat for Leopard page:
    http://www.apple.com/macosx/leopard/features/ichat .html

    This sucks. I was really hoping to replace my kludgy VNC setups and NAT tables with a clean, elegant, and free remote desktop solution. Thanks a lot Apple!
    1. Re:A new iChat?? by aftk2 · · Score: 3, Informative

      First off, screen sharing appears to still be supported in the OS:

      Image here

      Additionally, the button for screen sharing is still present in the ichat screenshots:

      Image here
      (bottom right in the buddy list window)

      --
      concrete5: a cms made for marketing, but strong enough for geeks.
  11. Re:reminds me of something by Crazy+Taco · · Score: 3, Informative

    It was in the Leapord beta. I think that's a fairly good reason to make that assumption.

    --
    Beware of bugs in the above code; I have only proved it correct, not tried it.
  12. Correction Coming: ZFS to be available (sort of) by Dotnaught · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I was one of the two reporters in that interview and we both were surprised by Croll's comment. We were just contacted by Apple to say that what we heard (or what we both thought we heard) was not the fully story. The real story is:

    An Apple spokesperson seeking to clarify Croll's statement indicated that ZFS would be available as a limited option, but not as the default file system."

    Further detail:
    It's only available as a read only option from the command line.

    We're still trying to find out what this means, but a correction is coming.

  13. Still there by smurfsurf · · Score: 4, Informative

    Its description has been moved to the "Finder" page at http://www.apple.com/macosx/leopard/features/finde r.html in the "Closer connections" paragraph.

    "By clicking on a connected Mac, you can see and control that computer (if authorized, of course) as if you were sitting in front of it. "

  14. Are you sure about your data? by YesIAmAScript · · Score: 4, Insightful

    My understanding is that Samsung did score the contract for the chip in the 2nd Gen Nano. Wikipedia says so, for whatever that's worth.

    Additionally, I think people are getting crazy reactionary, assuming that the gaffe by SUN was responsible for ZFS not making Leopard.

    There's no way to know if it was even in there before anyway.

    And besides, Leopard was delayed by 6 months back in March. When you delay a product, you don't go adding new features to it, it'll just make the schedule longer. You might in fact defer features you were thinking of adding, like ZFS. It reduces the work to be done and helps shorten the schedule, keeping you closer to the original date.

    --
    http://lkml.org/lkml/2005/8/20/95
  15. The story is not accurate. by Kristoph · · Score: 3, Informative

    The InformationWeek editor has posted this ...

    As to the news, it seems that Croll mispoke a couple of times when asked about ZFS in Leopard. Despite direct questions about Sun CEO Schwartz's claims that ZFS is there, Croll flatly denied the reports to two of our reporters in a 1:1 interview.

    An Apple spokesperson called us Tuesday seeking to clarify Croll's statement. Croll was apparently supposed to indicate that ZFS would be available as a limited option, but not as the default file system."

    We are now writing a separate story to note Apple's mis-statement and hopefully to reveal more about how ZFS would work in Leopard.

    We'll update you here when that story is live.

    Michael Singer

    InformationWeek - West Coast Editor

  16. Jives with editorial comments on TFA by LionMage · · Score: 3, Informative
    Apparently, one of the editors at InformationWeek (Michael Singer, West Coast Editor) saw several perplexed comments left by readers and added similar commentary to yours, which I thought would be germane:

    As to the news, it seems that Croll mispoke [sic] a couple of times when asked about ZFS in Leopard. Despite direct questions about Sun CEO Schwartz's claims that ZFS is there, Croll flatly denied the reports to two of our reporters in a 1:1 interview.

    An Apple spokesperson called us Tuesday seeking to clarify Croll's statement. Croll was apparently supposed to indicate that ZFS would be available as a limited option, but not as the default file system."

    We are now writing a separate story to note Apple's mis-statement and hopefully to reveal more about how ZFS would work in Leopard.

    We'll update you here when that story is live.
    Glad to see there's an effort underway to get the facts out to people.
  17. spelling by Gary+W.+Longsine · · Score: 4, Interesting

    The larger pattern of which this is one example seems to indicate that many people don't read, except Slashdot and other geek discussion forums, blogs, etc., In turn, this leads to a self-perpetuating defect. A meme, if you will, mutates, and replicates in this pool because the corrective mechanisms are weak. It then may rise to dominance in a limited domain of Slashdot, for example, if people don't spend enough time reading outside materials. (We already know the articles are often not read.) People see these things misspelled more often than not. If they don't read sources from literature or properly edited magazines or newspapers then they pick up the wrong spelling or usage, and add to the noise. The feedback loop builds as other people are then more likely to encounter the incorrect usages or spellings more frequently than they otherwise would.

    --
    If you mod me down, I shall become more powerful than you could possibly imagine.
    1. Re:spelling by toadlife · · Score: 3, Funny

      The larger pattern of which this is one example seems to indicate that many people don't read, except Slashdot and other geek discussion forums, blogs, etc., In turn, this leads to a self-perpetuating defect. A meme, if you will... Their seems to be some merit to you're theory. The internet is causing us to loose a grip on the English language. It's to bad.
      --
      I don't always use unix-like operating systems; but when I do, I prefer FreeBSD.
  18. Re:Haven't you learned anything? by Gary+W.+Longsine · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The five year history of Apple's share price indicates that Apple's strictly enforced policies regarding secrecy of their product plans is probably not hurting the company in any way. Considering the lackluster performance of other companies that blabber on and on and on about their half-baked plans that never mature, one might well conclude that this policy is helping Apple shareholders, even if it comes at the expense of occasional inconvenience.

    That said, ZFS is probably not important enough for Apple to punish Sun over a set of flapping gums. If you want a better conspiracy theory, perhaps Apple was testing Sun to see if they could keep a secret. The answer is "No."

    Really, though, everybody knows ZFS is interesting, and Apple is porting it to Mac OS X. It's quite likely that nobody at Apple knows when or if ZFS on Mac OS X will be mature enough to become a candidate for replacing the default filesystem. It probably won't happen before October, but that's not to say it will never happen.

    --
    If you mod me down, I shall become more powerful than you could possibly imagine.