zpool-create
—
create ZFS storage pool
zpool |
create [-dfn ]
[-m mountpoint]
[-o
property=value]…
[-o
feature@feature=value]
[-o
compatibility=off|legacy|file[,file]…]
[-O
file-system-property=value]…
[-R root]
[-t tname]
pool vdev… |
Creates a new storage pool containing the virtual devices specified on the
command line. The pool name must begin with a letter, and can only contain
alphanumeric characters as well as the underscore
(“_”), dash
(“-”), colon
(“:”), space
(“ ”), and period
(“.”). The pool names
mirror, raidz, draid,
spare and log are reserved, as are names
beginning with mirror, raidz,
draid, and spare. The
vdev specification is described in the
Virtual Devices section of
zpoolconcepts(7).
The command attempts to verify that each device specified is
accessible and not currently in use by another subsystem. However this check
is not robust enough to detect simultaneous attempts to use a new device in
different pools, even if multihost=
enabled. The administrator must ensure, that simultaneous
invocations of any combination of zpool
replace
, zpool
create
, zpool
add
, or zpool
labelclear
, do not refer to the same device. Using
the same device in two pools will result in pool corruption.
There are some uses, such as being currently mounted, or specified
as the dedicated dump device, that prevents a device from ever being used by
ZFS. Other uses, such as having a preexisting UFS file system, can be
overridden with -f
.
The command also checks that the replication strategy for the pool
is consistent. An attempt to combine redundant and non-redundant storage in
a single pool, or to mix disks and files, results in an error unless
-f
is specified. The use of differently-sized
devices within a single raidz or mirror group is also flagged as an error
unless -f
is specified.
Unless the -R
option is specified, the
default mount point is /pool.
The mount point must not exist or must be empty, or else the root dataset
will not be able to be be mounted. This can be overridden with the
-m
option.
By default all supported features are enabled on the new pool. The
-d
option and the -o
compatibility property (e.g -o
compatibility=2020) can be used to
restrict the features that are enabled, so that the pool can be imported on
other releases of ZFS.
-d
- Do not enable any features on the new pool. Individual features can be
enabled by setting their corresponding properties to
enabled with
-o
. See
zpool-features(7)
for details about feature properties.
-f
- Forces use of vdevs, even if they appear in use or
specify a conflicting replication level. Not all devices can be overridden
in this manner.
-m
mountpoint
- Sets the mount point for the root dataset. The default mount point is
/pool or altroot/pool if
altroot is specified. The mount point must be an
absolute path, legacy, or none. For
more information on dataset mount points, see
zfsprops(7).
-n
- Displays the configuration that would be used without actually creating
the pool. The actual pool creation can still fail due to insufficient
privileges or device sharing.
-o
property=value
- Sets the given pool properties. See
zpoolprops(7)
for a list of valid properties that can be set.
-o
compatibility=off|legacy|file[,file]…
- Specifies compatibility feature sets. See
zpool-features(7)
for more information about compatibility feature sets.
-o
feature@feature=value
- Sets the given pool feature. See the
zpool-features(7)
section for a list of valid features that can be set. Value can be either
disabled or enabled.
-O
file-system-property=value
- Sets the given file system properties in the root file system of the pool.
See
zfsprops(7)
for a list of valid properties that can be set.
-R
root
- Equivalent to
-o
cachefile=none
-o
altroot=root
-t
tname
- Sets the in-core pool name to tname while the
on-disk name will be the name specified as pool.
This will set the default of the cachefile property to
none. This is intended to handle name space collisions
when creating pools for other systems, such as virtual machines or
physical machines whose pools live on network block devices.