Sanoid is a policy-driven snapshot management tool for ZFS filesystems. When combined with the Linux KVM hypervisor, you can use it to make your systems functionally immortal.
(Real time demo: rolling back a full-scale cryptomalware infection in seconds!)
More prosaically, you can use Sanoid to create, automatically thin, and monitor snapshots and pool health from a single eminently human-readable TOML config file at /etc/sanoid/sanoid.conf. (Sanoid also requires a "defaults" file located at /etc/sanoid/sanoid.defaults.conf, which is not user-editable.) A typical Sanoid system would have a single cron job:
* * * * * /usr/local/bin/sanoid --cron
And its /etc/sanoid/sanoid.conf might look something like this:
[data/home]
use_template = production
[data/images]
use_template = production
recursive = yes
process_children_only = yes
[data/images/win7]
hourly = 4
#############################
# templates below this line #
#############################
[template_production]
hourly = 36
daily = 30
monthly = 3
yearly = 0
autosnap = yes
autoprune = yes
Which would be enough to tell sanoid to take and keep 36 hourly snapshots, 30 dailies, 3 monthlies, and no yearlies for all datasets under data/images (but not data/images itself, since process_children_only is set). Except in the case of data/images/win7-spice, which follows the same template (since it's a child of data/images) but only keeps 4 hourlies for whatever reason.
Sanoid also includes a replication tool, syncoid, which facilitates the asynchronous incremental replication of ZFS filesystems. A typical syncoid command might look like this:
syncoid data/images/vm backup/images/vm
Which would replicate the specified ZFS filesystem (aka dataset) from the data pool to the backup pool on the local system, or
syncoid data/images/vm root@remotehost:backup/images/vm
Which would push-replicate the specified ZFS filesystem from the local host to remotehost over an SSH tunnel, or
syncoid root@remotehost:data/images/vm backup/images/vm
Which would pull-replicate the filesystem from the remote host to the local system over an SSH tunnel.
Syncoid supports recursive replication (replication of a dataset and all its child datasets) and uses mbuffer buffering, lzop compression, and pv progress bars if the utilities are available on the systems used.