Peter Schuller wrote:
My understanding from the reading I have done is that in a situation like
this where power outages are a danger (and presuably having the UPS signal
the server to shut down gracefully is not practical), you need to make the
file system as robust as possible in the first
Exactly, which is why I thought that just bypassing all those
interventions with -y was 'brushing under the carpet'. No?
Ah I see. Yes. Given that all bets are off, it's hoping for the best ;)
I realise it would normally be excessively cautious to go for
synchronous mounting, but what about
If you are running without write caching turned on (which is the default),
That should be, if you are running WITH write caching turned on.
--
/ Peter Schuller
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My understanding from the reading I have done is that in a situation like
this where power outages are a danger (and presuably having the UPS signal
the server to shut down gracefully is not practical), you need to make the
file system as robust as possible in the first place, rather than rely
We started using FreeBSD for some network monitoring, but have found
that a hard reboot forces us to answer filesytem questions on boot. Is
there a way to mount each filesystem without this? Or how can we use
FreeBSD in a remote location without needing to intervene in
situatutions like this?
Randy Ramsdell wrote:
We started using FreeBSD for some network monitoring, but have found
that a hard reboot forces us to answer filesytem questions on boot. Is
there a way to mount each filesystem without this? Or how can we use
FreeBSD in a remote location without needing to intervene in
Bart Silverstrim wrote:
Randy Ramsdell wrote:
We started using FreeBSD for some network monitoring, but have found
that a hard reboot forces us to answer filesytem questions on boot.
Is there a way to mount each filesystem without this? Or how can we
use FreeBSD in a remote location without
Randy Ramsdell wrote:
We started using FreeBSD for some network monitoring, but have found
that a hard reboot forces us to answer filesytem questions on boot. Is
there a way to mount each filesystem without this? Or how can we use
FreeBSD in a remote location without needing to intervene in
Vince wrote:
Randy Ramsdell wrote:
We started using FreeBSD for some network monitoring, but have found
that a hard reboot forces us to answer filesytem questions on boot. Is
there a way to mount each filesystem without this? Or how can we use
FreeBSD in a remote location without needing to
Robert Huff wrote:
Randy Ramsdell writes:
What is the value of background_fsck in /etc/rc.conf ?
This isn't set. Was is supposed to be? So far, I have only
installed applications we need. And everything seem fine except
the reboot issue.
I'm going to jump in here.
On Thu, Dec 06, 2007 at 11:42:22AM -0500, Randy Ramsdell wrote:
Oh, Is there a way to not receive 2 messages for every reply to this thread?
Something like this in ~/.procmailrc
:0 Wh: msgid.lock
| $FORMAIL -D 8192 msgid.cache
or like this in ~/.mailfilter
`reformail -D 8000 duplicate.cache`
On Thu, Dec 06, 2007 at 12:50:55PM -0500, Randy Ramsdell wrote:
PS. I am confused about why so many people are replying to the list and my
personal e-mail. This one was sent to me only. Others were sent to me and
the list. Actually, every other reply. Is this normal for the list as I am
Randy Ramsdell wrote:
I think I will just set the rc.conf variable to answer Y to fsck
questions unless there is a better way.
A side note, this system has been hard shutdown two times and each time
required intervention. We also use several Linux system ( reiserfs and
ext3 ) and raely do I
Well any number of things, but the most recent was a prolonged power
outage.
It is important to differentiate between expected fsck activity and
unexpected.
If you are running without write caching turned on (which is the default), a
power outtage will constitute a crash from which a file
On Thu, 06 Dec 2007 11:42:22 -0500
Randy Ramsdell [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Vince wrote:
What is the value of background_fsck in /etc/rc.conf ?
This isn't set. Was is supposed to be?
No, it's on by default, but there's an early check to determine if the
background check can be run.
On Thu, December 6, 2007 4:42 pm, Randy Ramsdell wrote:
Vince wrote:
Randy Ramsdell wrote:
We started using FreeBSD for some network monitoring, but have found
that a hard reboot forces us to answer filesytem questions on boot. Is
there a way to mount each filesystem without this? Or how
Randy Ramsdell wrote:
Robert Huff wrote:
Randy Ramsdell writes:
What is the value of background_fsck in /etc/rc.conf ?
This isn't set. Was is supposed to be? So far, I have only
installed applications we need. And everything seem fine except
the reboot issue.
I'm going to
Randy Ramsdell wrote:
We started using FreeBSD for some network monitoring, but have found
that a hard reboot forces us to answer filesytem questions on boot. Is
there a way to mount each filesystem without this? Or how can we use
FreeBSD in a remote location without needing to intervene in
Randy Ramsdell wrote:
Vince wrote:
Randy Ramsdell wrote:
We started using FreeBSD for some network monitoring, but have found
that a hard reboot forces us to answer filesytem questions on boot. Is
there a way to mount each filesystem without this? Or how can we use
FreeBSD in a remote
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