If that's Oracle's ZFS then it's not really comparable, it's essentially a very old closed fork. So on top of using a languishing outdated version you have another reliability problem (Oracle). It's a little bit like comparing OracleDB to MariaDB.
Most people use Open ZFS which is from the Illumos project, which was basically the escape hatch that the engineers who wrote ZFS used when Oracle tried to close source Solaris after the Sun acquisition. There are decades of improvements in all of the OSS versions that comprise Illumos (which Oracle has denied themselves by attempting to close source it, since they cannot feed off of downstream OSS code). i.e most of the people who wrote ZFS immediately left Oracle and worked on Open ZFS.
Open ZFS is for both FreeBSD and Linux, and is what most people are referring to when discussing ZFS. I've never used Oracle ZFS and never will.
Most people use Open ZFS which is from the Illumos project, which was basically the escape hatch that the engineers who wrote ZFS used when Oracle tried to close source Solaris after the Sun acquisition. There are decades of improvements in all of the OSS versions that comprise Illumos (which Oracle has denied themselves by attempting to close source it, since they cannot feed off of downstream OSS code). i.e most of the people who wrote ZFS immediately left Oracle and worked on Open ZFS.
Open ZFS is for both FreeBSD and Linux, and is what most people are referring to when discussing ZFS. I've never used Oracle ZFS and never will.