Hi all, I am (slowly) experimenting with my LaCie Ethernet Disk Mini v2 NAS. In order to maintain compatibility with Lacie's software, I did not change the disk layout (yet). I can run my own OpenWRT without disrupting the original firmware by putting the kernel's uImage on [sda9]/snaps/00/boot and the root filesystem on [sda2] which is an xfs partition (it's the 300GB user partition) mounted as read/write.
Now every time I shutdown the box, my xfs filesystem gets corrupted and at the next reboot kernel ends up panicking because it can't mount the root filesystem to find an init file. I figured the shutdown sequence did not correctly unmount my filesystem; I found the executed command was "umount -a -r", so I tried doing it manually: r...@openwrt:~# umount -a -r umount: devpts busy - remounted read-only umount: tmpfs busy - remounted read-only umount: tmpfs busy - remounted read-only umount: can't remount /dev/root read-only umount: can't remount rootfs read-only r...@openwrt:~# mount -t proc proc /proc r...@openwrt:~# umount -r / umount: can't remount /dev/root read-only I know that mounting the initial root filesystem as read-write is not a very nice thing to do, but could someone please point out why it's, like, forbidden by law, so that I even get punished for doing it? Thanks a lot! Gerlando _______________________________________________ openwrt-devel mailing list openwrt-devel@lists.openwrt.org https://lists.openwrt.org/mailman/listinfo/openwrt-devel