When `config.boot.zfs.enableUnstable` is set to true, grub was built with the `zfs` package even though the rest of the system uses the `zfsUnstable` package.
The effect of this can only be seen when `zfs` and `zfsUnstable` actually differ (which is not currently the case), for example when overriding one of them locally.
This simplifies the setup to receive emails from the ZFS Event Daemon
by relying on the sendmail wrapper defined by other modules such as
msmtp or Postfix.
This is more similar to how other modules like smartd deal with email
configuration.
The user is no longer required to define and rebuild their own ZFS
package to add email support.
GitHub: closes https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/issues/132464
This re-introduces the old stable ZFS version we had in the past following
the many predicted issues of ZFS 2.2.x series, that is much more stable
than any further ZFS version at the moment.
I am also removing myself from maintenance of any further ZFS versions as I am
planning to quit ZFS maintenance at some point.
In the meantime, for users like me who depend on ZFS for critical operations, here is a ZFS version
that is known to work for LTS kernels.
Being wanted by and ordered before local-fs.target isn't strictly
correct. And in systemd initrd, it's very incorrect because
local-fs.target is for the initrd file system, not the real root file
system.
a zfs fileSystems entry with an absolute (e.g. device) path rather than
a zfs dataser is parsed as an empty pool name, causing a doomed-to-fail
import job to be created as a boot dependency. Catch this as an assertion
Currently systemd-ask-passwd times out after 1m30s. After 3 tries this
causees systemd to enter the emergency shell and basically lead to an
unbootable system requiring a reboot to be able to try to unlock again.
Also if a pool is imported but not unlocked, the unlock step will no
longer be skipped.
Enable using an erofs filesystem as one of the filesystems needed to
boot the system. This is useful for example in image based deployments
where the Nix store is mounted read only.
[erofs](https://docs.kernel.org/filesystems/erofs.html) offers multiple
benefits over older filesystems like squashfs. Skip fsck.erofs because
it is still experimental.