On Tue, Oct 10, 2017, at 10:22, leo_...@volny.cz wrote:
> Instead of sd0b? Then it appears fine.
Yes, that was my point, everything seemed fine until I found that line
in dmesg.
> >> You might want to keep sd0b around as a dump partition though, just in
> >> case it ever panics before going mult
Haai,
"Frank Groeneveld" wrote:
>
> swapctl -l always lists /dev/sd1b correctly.
Instead of sd0b? Then it appears fine.
>> You might want to keep sd0b around as a dump partition though, just in
>> case it ever panics before going multiluser...
>
> The point of this operation was to reclaim that
On Tue, Oct 10, 2017, at 09:48, leo_...@volny.cz wrote:
> It'd seem more wrong to me if it'd try to swap to a nonexistent
> partition ;) Just in case, what is the output of 'swapctl -l' straight
> after boot, preferably when still single-user?
swapctl -l always lists /dev/sd1b correctly.
> You m
Haai,
"Frank Groeneveld" wrote:
> I recently switched the swap partition on a server from sd0b to sd1b.
> I've modified /etc/fstab accordingly and after a reboot swapctl -l lists
> it as being the only used swap partition correctly. Today I noticed this
> line in dmesg:
> root on sd0a (4340b9bfa4
I recently switched the swap partition on a server from sd0b to sd1b.
I've modified /etc/fstab accordingly and after a reboot swapctl -l lists
it as being the only used swap partition correctly. Today I noticed this
line in dmesg:
root on sd0a (4340b9bfa4cdde0a.a) swap on sd0b dump on sd0b
It stil
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