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Mac OS X Gets ZFS Support Courtesy of Former Apple Engineer

Mac OS X Gets ZFS Support Courtesy of Former Apple Engineer

It’s been long rumored that Apple would include support in OS X for the ZFS file system designed by Sun. The rumors date back to before Sun CEO Jonathan Schwartz announced in 2007 that Leopard would utilize ZFS as its file system.

9to5Mac’s Jordan Kahn writes:

…It even made an appearance in Disk Utility in a beta of Mac OS X 10.5. Although ZFS support was never included in Leopard, it was also initially hinted in Snow Leopard Server documentation in 2008 before the final public release.

In 2009, Apple had seemingly ceased all work on ZFS. Today MacRumors pointed us to a 2011 Ars Technica article profiling an Apple engineer named Don Brady who worked on the ZFS team at Apple until 2009. The report noted, “Apple couldn’t reach suitable license terms with Sun” at the time, and Brady eventually left to form his own company in 2010 called Ten’s Complement. Two years later, Brady and Ten’s Complement are bringing ZFS support to Mac OS X with the company’s latest project, ZEVO Silver Edition.

The Silver Edition is just the first of numerous products from Ten’s Complement and includes basic ZFS support. It will be priced at $19.95. Other versions will follow, including a Gold Edition, and a Platinum Edition which will include support for RAIDZ and other advanced features. A Developer Edition will also be released.