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I'm using native-zfs and was wondering if there is a way to use a ZFS partition for SWAP. I'm running my server off of a thumbdrive and thought that would be a good way to speed it up a little bit.

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3 Answers 3

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Here's a more elaborate guide, copied from the zfsonlinux wiki:

Step 1: Create a volume dataset (zvol) for use as a swap device

zfs create -V 4G -b $(getconf PAGESIZE) -o compression=zle \
      -o logbias=throughput -o sync=always \
      -o primarycache=metadata -o secondarycache=none \
      -o com.sun:auto-snapshot=false rpool/swap

You can adjust the size (the 4G part) to your needs.

The compression algorithm is set to zle because it is the cheapest available algorithm. With ashift=12 (4 kiB blocks on disk), the common case of a 4 kiB page size means that no compression algorithm can reduce I/O. The exception is all-zero pages, which are dropped by ZFS; but some form of compression has to be enabled to get this behavior. If your pool uses ashift=9, you could use compression=lz4.

Step 2: Format the swap device

mkswap -f /dev/zvol/rpool/swap

Step 3: Update /etc/fstab

echo /dev/zvol/rpool/swap none swap defaults 0 0 >> /etc/fstab

Warning: Always use long /dev/zvol aliases in configuration files. Never use a short /dev/zdX device name.

Step 4: Enable the swap device

swapon -av
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  • Due to my machine having 4k page size I get this Warning: "volblocksize (4096) is less than the default minimum block size (8192)". Any good options here? Nov 1, 2023 at 20:25
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Using ZFS for swap should just work, just like it does under Solaris and FreeBSD.

zfs create pool/swap -V 1G -b 4K
mkswap -f /dev/pool/swap
swapon /dev/pool/swap
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Swapping onto a ZFS zvol is possible, but is not a good idea, because of an open bug that can cause your machine to deadlock when low on space.

Swap space is used when the machine is low on memory and trying to free some up by swapping out less-frequently used data.

When ZFS processes writes to a zvol, it can need to allocate new memory inside the kernel to handle updates to various ZFS data structures. If the machine is low on space already, it might need to swap something out to make this space available, but this causes an infinite loop.

So, instead of swapping to ZFS, just allow a small additional partition for swap space. Or for many situations you can just not have swap, and rely on other data being paged out to the filesystem to free up memory.

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