Le Jeudi 28 F�vrier 2002 13:37, Borsenkow Andrej a �crit :
> > Le Jeudi 28 F�vrier 2002 12:59, Guillaume Cottenceau a �crit :
> > > if you're root, you can do many things leading to a situation
> > > where you can't boot, because you may set things up a very
> > > illogical way.
> >
> > Guillaume,
> >
> > 1. The machine is not destroyed in the situation I describe. It is
>
> perfectly
>
> > functionnal but rc.sysinit will NOT ALLOW the user to boot it. This is
>
> the
>
> > point I am trying to be understood here.
>
> I must agree here. If you are using journaling fs for root it is
> perfectly legal (even if not advisable) to mount it rw on boot. This is
> not an error and must be supported (actually I am surprised to know it
> does not work now. It worked all the time before).
>
> -andrej

I'm running ext3 on my ROOTFS. Actually fsck does not like to check a mounted 
FS, which is normal. But rc.sysinit takes this for an error and drops us to a 
maintenance shell. Just try to rebuild an initrd with rootfs rw in 
/etc/fstab, rebuild the boot loader then reboot,  instant nitemare :)
Pascal

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