It, along with some other equipment, runs off 2 x 50 kW diesel generators
which are swapped by a mechanic once per week. The swap-over takes less than a minute. The computer runs
off a UPS, which easily holds its charge during the swap.
But, unlike the other windows systems that run up there, the FreeBSD system seems incredibly
prone to disk corruption. Often the system will not reboot, and hangs while it asks for a file check.
I can't do that remotely - it has to be a person.
I frequently need to run fsck, and that does not always work. It is hard
to instruct a diesel mechanic on such matters from such a distance. "fsck -y"
usually does not work either.
Is there any way I can make the disk a bit less sensitive? e.g. some clever additional
command when I mount it in the fstab file which says "don't be too fussy - boot up even
if I don't feel that well'.
It seems someone only needs to sneeeze and it goes into panic mode. I would happily live with the odd
corrupt disk track or so if it means I can keep it running and at least be able to access
it remotely. Please don't advise me to be more careful and get a better power supply etc -
it simply is not possible. This is a very remote site, the humidity is low, static electricity
is always a problem.
thanks
Wayne Hocking
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