On Sep 18, 2011 9:22 AM, "Michael Mol" <[email protected]> wrote: > > On Sat, Sep 17, 2011 at 10:13 PM, Dale <[email protected]> wrote: > > Michael Mol wrote: > > [snippage] > > > Ahhhhh. I see now. So, it mounts proc and sys but that is in the init then > > it mounts the real root outside the init. Then it umounts the proc and sys > > under the init and then switches to the real root and starts init there. > > > > Where does /usr and /var come in here? Isn't the init supposed to mount > > that too? Do I add that myself? If so, when to fsck get ran? > > From the look of it, yeah, it'd be your responsibility to do that in > the "# Do your stuff here." area. > > Probably why the script has a line that says: echo "This script mounts > rootfs and boots it up, nothing more!" >
Of course, you have to remember to mount usr in /mnt/root instead of in / That switch_root thing, you know. Rgds,

