Description from YouTube:
Has this happened to you?
You’re ready to upload a video, but your editing drive is full. You grab an old USB drive, copy some files, and hope it doesn’t crash.
Or worse—you’ve lost an important project because of drive failure. Sound familiar?
It’s not your fault. As creators, we’re constantly juggling files—thumbnails, music, B-roll, entire video projects. But here’s the truth: USB drives and basic storage setups can’t keep up with you.
In this video, I’ll show you how ZFS storage can save your sanity. Whether you’re looking at Synology NAS, TrueNAS, or even building your own DIY ZFS server, there’s a solution that can:
✅ Protect your files from corruption.
✅ Scale with your growing channel.
✅ Keep everything organized so you can focus on creating.
Stop losing files and start future-proofing your work. Trust me, once you understand what ZFS can do, you’ll wonder how you managed without it.
Thank you, I’ll take a look.
After reading your message yesterday I did few researches and found an interesting discussion which talk about the different solutions for Linux to play with ZFS:
https://discourse.practicalzfs.com/t/which-linux-distribution-works-best-with-openzfs-and-zfs-boot-menu-and-allows-easy-os-upgrades/1449
It appears that ZFSbootmenu is the way to go if one want to have ZFS on root as linus@telegrafverket.cc suggested before in his message.
For others who might be interested I also found this documentation which contains a lot of information:
https://docs.zfsbootmenu.org/en/v2.3.x
Grub2 works as well and is what I’ve been using.