>> A standard OpenBSD installation is somewhat susceptible to power failures
>> though. Especially fail/back/fail again during the startup procedure while
>> it's relinking libraries in random order. Not saying it can't be used but
>> some thought is needed if you know that it's *likely* to be powered off
>> without shutdown, or if the power is flaky.
> If you want to run a system that is resistant to damage from power faults, 
> take a look at Resflash. 
>
>      https://stable.rcesoftware.com/resflash/
>
> It's more tolerant of power faults since the running system has all of its 
> actual disks in read-only mode and anything writable is done to mfs-based 
> mounts, including /usr/lib and /usr/libexec during the re-linking process. It 
> also has a very nice upgrade and rollback process, useful if you're 
> maintaining remote routers/firewalls. 
>
> Don't ask for support on this list since it's not base OpenBSD, but the 
> author is pretty good about helping people out. 

I can second all what Paul wrote before. I've been running
resflash-image driven openbsd instances in round about 15 distributed
locations since 2016.

Compared to let's say "commercial" equipment they do a *very* good job.

As well it's update mechanism as it's integration in our automation and
monitoring framework works very well.

And they survived every datacenter current issue so far ;-)


Cheers,

Marco





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