################ Python-SimpleZFS ################ A thin wrapper around ZFS from the `ZFS on Linux `_ project. The library aims at providing a simple, low-level interface for working with ZFS, either by wrapping the ``zfs(8)`` and ``zpool(8)`` CLI utilities or by accessing the native python API. It does not provide a high-level interface, however, and does not aim to. It also tries to keep as little state as possible. Two interface classes make up the API, ``ZFS`` and ``ZPool``, which are wrappers around the functionality of the CLI tools of the same name. They come with two implementations: * The CLI implementation wraps the executables * The Native implementation uses the native API released with ZoL 0.8. In this early stage, the native implementation has not been written. Status ****** The table gives a rough overview over features and their implementation state. For the PE Helper, functions where it is of no use are left empty: +-------+------------+-----------------+-----+--------+-----------+ | API | Topic | Feature | CLI | Native | PE Helper | +=======+============+=================+=====+========+===========+ | ZFS | Properties | Read native | Yes | No | | | | +-----------------+-----+--------+-----------+ | | | Write native | Yes | No | No | | | +-----------------+-----+--------+-----------+ | | | Read metadata | Yes | No | | | | +-----------------+-----+--------+-----------+ | | | Write metadata | Yes | No | | | +------------+-----------------+-----+--------+-----------+ | | Datasets | List datasets | Yes | No | | | | +-----------------+-----+--------+-----------+ | | | Check existance | Yes | No | | | | +-----------------+-----+--------+-----------+ | | | Create Fileset | Yes | No | Yes | | | +-----------------+-----+--------+-----------+ | | | Create Volume | No | No | | | | +-----------------+-----+--------+-----------+ | | | Create Snapshot | No | No | No | | | +-----------------+-----+--------+-----------+ | | | Create Bookmark | No | No | | | | +-----------------+-----+--------+-----------+ | | | Destroy | No | No | No | +-------+------------+-----------------+-----+--------+-----------+ | ZPool | Storage | List pools | No | No | | | | +-----------------+-----+--------+-----------+ | | | Read structure | Yes | No | | | | +-----------------+-----+--------+-----------+ | | | Replace disk | No | No | No | | | +-----------------+-----+--------+-----------+ | | | Destroy | No | No | No | | | +-----------------+-----+--------+-----------+ | | | Create | No | No | No | | +------------+-----------------+-----+--------+-----------+ | | Properties | Read native | No | No | | | | +-----------------+-----+--------+-----------+ | | | Write native | No | No | No | | | +-----------------+-----+--------+-----------+ | | | Read metadata | No | No | | | | +-----------------+-----+--------+-----------+ | | | Write metadata | No | No | | +-------+------------+-----------------+-----+--------+-----------+ Usage ***** One can either get a concrete implementation by calling ``ZFSCli``/``ZFSNative`` or ``ZPoolCli``/``ZPoolNative``, or more conveniently use the functions ``get_zfs(implementation_name)`` or ``get_zpool(implementation_name)``. First, get an instance: .. code-block:: python-shell >>> from simplezfs import get_zfs >>> zfs = get_zfs('cli') # or "native" for the native API >>> zfs >>> >>> for ds in zfs.list_datasets(): ... print(ds.name) ... tank tank/system tank/system/rootfs Compatibility ************* The library is written with `Python` 3.6 or higher in mind, which was in a stable release in a few of the major Linux distributions we care about (Debian Buster, Ubuntu 18.04 LTS, RHEL 8, Gentoo). On the ZoL_ side, the code is developed mostly on version ``0.8``, and takes some validation values from that release. The library doesn't make a lot of assumptions, the code should work on ``0.7``, too. If you spot an incompatibility, please let us know via the issue tracker. Testing ******* An extensive set of tests are in the ``tests/`` subfolder, it can be run using ``pytest`` from the source of the repository. At this time, only the validation functions and the ZFS Cli API are tested, the tests are non-destructive and won't run the actual commands but instead mock away the ``subprocess`` invocations and supply dummy commands to run (usually ``/bin/true``) should the code be changed in a way that isn't caught by the test framework. Nevertheless, keep in mind that if commands are run for whatever reason, they most likely result in unrecoverable data loss. It is planned to add a separate set of `destructive` tests that need to be specially activated for testing if the code works when run against an actual Linux system. This can't be done using most of the CI providers, as the nature of ZFS requires having a operating system with loaded modules that may be destroyed during the test run. .. _ZoL: https://zfsonlinux.org/