On Tue, 2014-03-18 at 21:39 -0600, Chris Murphy wrote:

> >>> Fedora takes a different approach though, and will mount an explicit
> >>> boot partition to /boot and the ESP to /boot/efi, and do so
> >>> unconditionally without involving autofs.  Fedora could add
> >>> "x-systemd-automount" to the mount options of /boot/efi, and thus
> >>> turning /boot/efi into an autofs too.


> RFE: Do not persistently mount EFI System partition at /boot/efi 
> https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1077984
> 
> It's still better to remove the on-going writing of configuration files to 
> the ESP, however. A simple one-time forwarding-configuration file pointing to 
> the /boot volume UUID, permits configuration files to be written somewhere on 
> /boot, which can then be md raid1 or btrfs raid1 based. Boot is made more 
> resilient whether single or multiple disk. This works today on BIOS, but not 
> on UEFI.

Why not also extend this to /boot also? It's "rarely" used in day to day
on a system, really only for yum updates that include a kernel. 

[root@strawberry ~]# lsof | grep /boot
[root@strawberry ~]# 



-- 
William Brown <will...@firstyear.id.au>

-- 
devel mailing list
devel@lists.fedoraproject.org
https://admin.fedoraproject.org/mailman/listinfo/devel
Fedora Code of Conduct: http://fedoraproject.org/code-of-conduct

Reply via email to