What's the advantage of booting with an mfsroot?
You can make a minimal fbsd system in the mfsroot that is smart enough to 
"init_chroot" from a SMB/NFS netmount, or from a cloop file stored a CD or 
http-sever (cached to a tmpfs (ramdisk)). Mine also unionfs-mounts a tmpfs 
to what ever root that is used so you can make changes in ram and not on the 
source root mount.
This is also what Frenzy does - http://frenzy.org.ua/eng/

I don't know if HeX unionfs-mounts or not - 
http://www.rawpacket.org/projects/hex

Also, will it be advantageous to me?

I find it useful for executing FreeBSD rescues and where I need to pkg_add 
tools that are not already on the rootfs.
(FreeBSD installations contained within a UFS, UFS2 &/or ZFS logical partition)

I didn't think of it at first, but the mfsroot could also have all the 
smarts contained in it for mounting and init_chroot'ing a ZFS root.
You still have to load grub and the kernel/mfsroot from a grub-supported fs, 
but I was very pleased to hear that phcoder is working on that!
-joey



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