If it''s just for recovery purposes, try ''zpool import -f -R
/mnt <pool>''.
Because there isn''t a 1:1 correspondence between filesystems and pools,
it isn''t possible to just mount a filesystem without importing the
pool.
And every ZFS filesystem must be part of a pool, so I''m not sure what
you mean by "I have none and don''t want one."
- Eric
On Mon, Oct 22, 2007 at 11:42:21PM +0800, Uwe Dippel
wrote:> Hi,
>
> back after half a year ...
> ... and still, after reading documents for the last half day, I am not
> a bit wiser.
> Someone had promised to update (and simplify) some examples, but - at
> least to me - that hasn''t happened. :(
> [Just read the ''Legacy Mount Points'', and tell me as
beginner, what to do ?!)
>
> I need to mount /dev/dsk/c2d0s1 into my existing file system (UFS).
> Just to retrieve the data, and done. Is that so complicated ?
> Should not, but all my 10-20 efforts until now have failed miserably.
>
> The closest I get is to ''zpool import'', and it shows the
name of the
> zfs on that drive (''home''). But mounting fails, saying it
might be
> busy. And it proposes -f, but that also fails, because the mount point
> ''/export/home'' is used.
> Also, I don''t want to import a pool, since I have none and
don''t want one.
>
> Please, again, review the documentation and make a beginners''
guide
> that allows us to use ZFS without first getting a PhD in it, and all
> its terminologies, constructions, syntaxes and data structures !
>
> Uwe
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--
Eric Schrock, Solaris Kernel Development http://blogs.sun.com/eschrock