![]() ![]() > Your blkid output suggests the GPT was created by btrfs ) > Later, when switching to ZFS, I ran "zpool create fastdrive /dev/nvme1n1" > on the whole raw volume, and then mounted /dev/nvme1n1. > There had been no partition table, I just ran "mkfs.btrfs /dev/nvme1n1" The FreeBSD variety of ZFS does not do that, but Solaris AFAIR does Later, when switching to ZFS, I ran "zpool create fastdrive /dev/nvme1n1"Īgain on the whole volume. On the whole raw volume, and then mounted /dev/nvme1n1. There had been no partition table, I just ran "mkfs.btrfs /dev/nvme1n1" > partition table before switching to ZFS? > I'm guessing it's in the GPT somewhere. Did you try removing the entireīy the way, I see the man page for blkid recommends to use lsblk insteadĪnd points to wipefs to erase obsolete magic strings from the device > The name "nvme1n1" is for the whole disk even, not for a partition thereof. > In what disk structure can this signature of type "btrfs" reside? However, there is a btrfs label or something > The problem is that /dev/nvme1n1 is being used for ZFS now, and there is Victor Sudakov Du, 14 mar 21, 10:58:02, Victor Sudakov wrote: Sector size (logical/physical): 512 bytes / 512 bytes I tried to unload/load the btrfs kernel module but it did not help. ![]() The problem is that /dev/nvme1n1 is being used for ZFS now, and there isĬurrently no btrfs thereon. Btrfs thinks that /dev/nvme1n1 has a btrfs: ![]()
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