Tamouh H. wrote:
Micah, Kris:
You guys are hilarious, where can I find ppl like you ?
Of course I'm using a backup power, but there are 101 reasons for FreeBSD to
reboot by itself and when that happens, 30 minutes downtime is 30 minutes of
wasted time.
Since you're *so* smart, perhaps
Tamouh H. wrote:
Micah, Kris:
You guys are hilarious, where can I find ppl like you ?
Of course I'm using a backup power, but there are 101
reasons for FreeBSD to reboot by itself and when that
happens, 30 minutes downtime is 30 minutes of wasted time.
Since you're *so*
Tamouh H. wrote:
Tamouh H. wrote:
[ ... ]
PS You can find plenty of people like Kris and Micah right here on
freebsd-questions: people giving their own time to actually
help people sort out their problems. Haven't seen you doing that.
Probably your whole 10 YRS of working on FreeBSD was
I have disabled background fsck in my /etc/rc.conf with:
background_fsck=no
But I am curious - what does this mean for the system if the system
crashes ?
Does this mean that the system will wait for all non root partitions to
fully fsck before coming up into multi-user mode ?
OR
Does it mean
On 3/13/06, Ensel Sharon [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I have disabled background fsck in my /etc/rc.conf with:
background_fsck=no
But I am curious - what does this mean for the system if the system
crashes ?
Does this mean that the system will wait for all non root partitions to
fully fsck
Ensel Sharon wrote:
I have disabled background fsck in my /etc/rc.conf with:
background_fsck=no
But I am curious - what does this mean for the system if the system
crashes ?
Does this mean that the system will wait for all non root partitions to
fully fsck before coming up into multi-user
Ensel Sharon wrote:
I have disabled background fsck in my /etc/rc.conf with:
background_fsck=no
But I am curious - what does this mean for the system if the system
crashes ?
Does this mean that the system will wait for all non root
partitions
to fully fsck before
On Mon, 13 Mar 2006, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On 3/13/06, Ensel Sharon [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I have disabled background fsck in my /etc/rc.conf with:
background_fsck=no
But I am curious - what does this mean for the system if the system
crashes ?
Does this mean that the
On Mon, Mar 13, 2006 at 11:42:45PM -0500, Tamouh H. wrote:
Ensel Sharon wrote:
I have disabled background fsck in my /etc/rc.conf with:
background_fsck=no
But I am curious - what does this mean for the system if the system
crashes ?
Does this mean that the
Tamouh H. wrote:
Ensel Sharon wrote:
I have disabled background fsck in my /etc/rc.conf with:
background_fsck=no
But I am curious - what does this mean for the system if the system
crashes ?
Does this mean that the system will wait for all non root
partitions
to fully fsck before
On Mon, 13 Mar 2006, Micah wrote:
Ensel Sharon wrote:
I have disabled background fsck in my /etc/rc.conf with:
background_fsck=no
But I am curious - what does this mean for the system if the system
crashes ?
Does this mean that the system will wait for all non root
Tamouh H. wrote:
Ensel Sharon wrote:
I have disabled background fsck in my /etc/rc.conf with:
background_fsck=no
But I am curious - what does this mean for the system if
the system
crashes ?
Does this mean that the system will wait for all non root
partitions
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