Apple discontinues ZFS project, turns attention to own next-gen file system

Apple StoreApple has posted a notice on their ZFS open source site that states:

The ZFS project has been discontinued. The mailing list and repository will also be removed shortly.

One reason for dropping ZFS could be due to licensing problems with Sun who was recently acquired by Oracle, but isn’t Larry Steve’s good buddy?

Daring Fireball’s John Gruber writes that the real reason could be the “NetApp patent lawsuit against ZFS.”

“The flip side is that I’ve heard that Apple’s file systems team is full steam ahead on their own next-generation file system,” Gruber reports. “And, perhaps not coincidentally, they’re hiring.”

Full article here.

[Thanks to MacDailyNews Reader “Fred Mertz” for the heads up.]

32 Comments

  1. @ Solaris SA for 15 years

    Apple pulling ZFS development is not a loss for 95+% (maybe even 99%) of OS X users — even OS X Server users. ZFS had distinct advantages when used with server farms. It had a few minor advantages when a user had a handful of disks. It had minimal advantages for the majority of Mac OS X users who have one hard drive and one backup hard drive. Losing ZFS is not *that* big a deal.

    Hopefully Apple has something already in the works to replace HFS+. We’ll all need it in five years or so, but right now HFS+ suffices for at least 95% of Mac OS X users.

  2. @ Shadowself, agreed — but Apple better be working damn hard on that replacement technology. If Apple could make an all-in-one MacMini Server / 8-slot Drobo-like unit ASAP, I have a couple dozen friends who would buy it in a second.

  3. While I think Shadowself has over-stated the case, it’s true. ZFS is mainly useful for LARGE file systems. What’s more, for systems of Large Files.
    As for I’m a PC, it isn’t like Windows offers a better option.
    For the crowd mentioning Licensing Issues, isn’t the NetApp problem about Sun placing a NetApp IP in Open Source? Right now Sun is ahead, but that could change … Monday.
    disposableidentity offered another good point, while supporting Shadowself – Apple NEEDS a next-gen File System. If not the excellent ZFS, then something much like it. The sooner the better. They have been selling Servers for years, SANS for about as long, and have just brought out the Mac mini Server. These are all pretty much limited to SOHO or Department installations without a new File System.

  4. Wow. It’s truly amazing how things in the tech world can change so fast after being liberally hyped as a sure thing for the last three years. Early SL builds included ZFS only to have it stripped *just* before it went to market, and now it’s dead in shark infested waters. There’s probably some good news behind this cutthroat death though; Apple clearly knows where they’re going and has decided they have something better to get them there.

  5. @ Pete,
    Not too sure who Fred is but if he is willing to give head to get his name on a website then that’s up to him.

    After all it’s a free world…until you have to pay for it.

  6. From my understanding, ZFS has more of a server orientation… fixed computers and storage, so it may not have handled the Mac scenario as well.

    Macs are regularly connecting/disconnecting external hard drives and many use external drives to augment their internal storage, so weren’t there questions as to the viability of ZFS in that type of Mac environment?

    Are the ZFS licensing terms so Draconian that it’ll be cheaper over the long haul for Apple will spend tens of millions to develop their own file system?

    I have the feeling we’re NOT getting the whole story.

  7. OMG!
    Never saw this coming!
    N O T ! ! !

    The reason the ZFS project failed is because the format is a failure. It consisted of 95% PROMISE & HYPE, aka VAPOR. Sun never provided any support to Apple with the format. Apple was left to develop it to coordinate with Mac OS X all by themselves. Then, low and behold ZFS fails and delays and fails and delays and fails and delays at just about every step of development, despite Apple making the project Open Source.

    I’d love to see all the promise of ZFS built into Mac OS X, but let’s face it: The project was a sabotaged dream. No, it won’t help for Apple to ‘buy’ the technology. It simply doesn’t work. ZFS is now just a footnote, an example of how to waste man years of development time on oblique vaporware.

    What’s next is the real question of interest…

  8. ZFS joins the garbage heap with Flash. Apple is finished fsucking around on 90s technologies that are headed to the same unmarked grave as Winnows and Sympathian. Steve, as GG said, “rip out their throats and stuff em down your garbage disposer”

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