Ubuntu Plans To Make ZFS File-System Support Standard On Linux
An anonymous reader writes: Canonical's Mark Shuttleworth revealed today that they're planning to make ZFS standard on Ubuntu. They are planning to include ZFS file-system as "standard in due course," but no details were revealed beyond that. However, ZFS On Linux contributor Richard Yao has said they do plan on including it in their kernel for 16.04 LTS and the GPL vs. CDDL license worries aren't actually a problem. Many Linux users have been wanting ZFS on Linux, but aside from the out of tree module there hasn't been any luck in including it in the mainline kernel or with tier-one Linux distributions due to license differences.
Hell, it's already in many cases a superior experience on Linux, starting with that you can shrink a BTFS volume but you still can't shrink a ZFS volume. I suppose in the enterprise-centric world that ZFS is aimed at that's pretty much never an issue, but I've even run into it personally multiple times myself working for a small business and have been glad that I was running BTRFS instead. Frankly, for many use-cases it seems like running ZFS on Linux is more hassle for the sake of then more hassle later on.
I remember sigs. Oh, a simpler time!