cracauer@
Developer
This is pretty cool. Expand your ZRAID or mirror with uneven size disks and more:
View: https://youtu.be/mZ-dhntnkCQ?t=509
Music is too annoying. Unwatchable.
In addition, after registering, I got an invite for FreeBSD After Hours AMA:Apologies for the music.
There is a webinar on this tomorrow if you want a fresh feed:
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Understanding AnyRAID: Architecture, Use-Cases, and Tradeoffs - Klara Systems
Join Allan Jude and Jon Panozzo to learn how AnyRAID mixed-drive storage unlocks more usable ZFS capacity, flexible pool expansion, and efficient mixed-disk layouts.klarasystems.com
I think, these AMA's, will also appear later and be generally available, anyhow this should allow one to be there live as well.Join our post-conference
BSD discussion on June 30, 2026.
Following BSDCan 2026, Allan Jude and Kyle Evans are hosting a live Ask Me Anything session to break down the biggest FreeBSD, OpenZFS, and infrastructure announcements from the conference.
Bring your questions — this is an open discussion built for engineers in production environments.
You are watching a recording of the live stream. The individual talks will be posted as separate videos once the team of volunteers has time to cut the recordings and stitch the feeds together etc.They really need to add chapters to their videos for each talk. It’s a pain in the a** to scroll a long video and wait for buffering just to skip forward or backwards to the talk I want to watch. Don’t just dump the entire stream and forget it.
Organizers. Fix this.
In the case of a rounding error of difference, ZFS already does the right thing, as its metaslabs are all the same size, usually 16 GB, so any fractional remainder won't get used and won't cause a problem if the new drive is a few sectors shorter.I think this is rather intriguing. In general, it's probably always going to be a bit better to have drives that are basically the same size, however, this does help a bit when that's not the same case, such as when there's a slight mismatch in capacity between drives of the "same" size that aren't exactly due to rounding errors or if you want to replace a couple drives with larger disks while saving up/allowing for replication before placing the remainders in there.
It's been a while since I tried, but I thought that only applied when creating a new mirror/array. It might be my memory, but I didn't think that ZFS was so considerate when replacing a failed drive with one that rounded to be a bit shorter.In the case of a rounding error of difference, ZFS already does the right thing, as its metaslabs are all the same size, usually 16 GB, so any fractional remainder won't get used and won't cause a problem if the new drive is a few sectors shorter.
My takeaways (mostly non-technical) and datapoints from the OP's referenced BSDCan 2026 presentation by Allan Jude, and additionally the Klara webinar, some of which have only been mentioned in the webinar:There is a webinar on this tomorrow if you want a fresh feed:
https://klarasystems.com/webinars/understanding-anyraid-architecture-use-cases-tradeoffs/