> > You may wish to have a look at this article: > > http://www.freebsd.org/doc/en_US.ISO8859-1/articles/gjournal-desktop
Great article...thanks. Bookmarked for future use too! > In particular, you should make sure you use tunefs to enable Journaling and > disable soft update on the journaled filesystems, i.e.: > > tunefs -J enable -n disable /dev/ad0s1f.journal I was mistaken...I did this when I made the file system...I just posted a message to the thread showing the output of tunefs -p, but soft-updates are off, and journaling does show as on. > > Mount them using the async option: > > /dev/ad0s1f.journal /usr ufs rw,async 2 2 Here's my fstab line: /dev/da1.journal /files6/array2 ufs rw,async,nosuid,noatime 2 2 > > Note that the pass # still indicates the filesystem should be checked. While > I was writing the article, I was trying several scenarios were I had the > pass # set to 0, thinking that a gjournaled filesystem would not need fsck > at all. I would then press the reset button. In most cases, the system would > refuse to mount them. However with the pass # set, the fsck would finish > almost immediately, since the actual consistency check takes place when the > gjournal module is loaded (you will get a "journal consistent" after a bad > reboot) and before fstab is even parsed. All fsck does in this case is > simply confirm to the system it is a clean volume. > > In short, leaving the pass # to something that would cause an fsck is the > safe way to go. The fsck will be almost instant anyway. > > The file system is about 1.1TB, and I've got 2 of them that are journaled on this particular server. One is currently empty, and fsck's in about 10-15 mins, while the other is 31% used, and takes about 45 mins. Thanks for your help thus far! --Brian _______________________________________________ [email protected] mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions To unsubscribe, send any mail to "[EMAIL PROTECTED]"
