Re: how does a system come up if you disable background fsck ?

2006-03-14 Thread Alex Zbyslaw
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

RE: how does a system come up if you disable background fsck ?

2006-03-14 Thread Tamouh H.
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*

Re: how does a system come up if you disable background fsck ?

2006-03-14 Thread Chuck Swiger
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

how does a system come up if you disable background fsck ?

2006-03-13 Thread Ensel Sharon
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

Re: how does a system come up if you disable background fsck ?

2006-03-13 Thread [EMAIL PROTECTED]
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

Re: how does a system come up if you disable background fsck ?

2006-03-13 Thread Micah
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

RE: how does a system come up if you disable background fsck ?

2006-03-13 Thread Tamouh H.
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

Re: how does a system come up if you disable background fsck ?

2006-03-13 Thread Ensel Sharon
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

Re: how does a system come up if you disable background fsck ?

2006-03-13 Thread Kris Kennaway
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

Re: how does a system come up if you disable background fsck ?

2006-03-13 Thread Micah
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

Re: how does a system come up if you disable background fsck ?

2006-03-13 Thread Ensel Sharon
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

RE: how does a system come up if you disable background fsck ?

2006-03-13 Thread Tamouh H.
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