On Sun, Jun 29, 2008 at 8:34 PM, Matthew Gardiner <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > > 2008/6/30 Tim <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>: > > >> >> On Sun, Jun 29, 2008 at 8:30 PM, Matthew Gardiner < >> [EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: >> >>> I think Kyle might be onto something here. With ZFS it is so easy >>>> to create file systems, one could expect many people to do so. >>>> In the past, it was so difficult and required planning, so people >>>> tended to be more careful about mount points. >>>> >>>> In this new world, we don't really have a way to show which >>>> (ZFS) file systems are critical during boot (AFAICT). However, >>>> if we already know that a file system create failed in this manner, >>>> we could set the "canmount" property to false. This bothers me, >>>> just a little, because if there is such an error, it would be propagated >>>> as another potential latent fault. OTOH, as currently implemented, >>>> it is a different, and IMHO more impactful, latent fault. Thoughts? >>>> -- richard >>> >>> >>> Hi, >>> >>> I would have thought that the computer to keep loading, and once fully >>> loaded, a polite message stating which devices couldn't be mounted at boot >>> time - I mean, I assumed that would be a pretty obvious way of handling >>> something that couldn't be mounted. >>> >>> Matthew >>> >>> _______________________________________________ >>> zfs-discuss mailing list >>> zfs-discuss@opensolaris.org >>> http://mail.opensolaris.org/mailman/listinfo/zfs-discuss >>> >>> >> >> And what happens if it's your root volume? Politely keep booting until it >> kernel panics? Hope nothing is corrupted in the process? > > > Come on man, use some commonsense! > > Geeze *shakes head* forget it, you're beyond help. > > Matthew > Insightful AND constructive. A++, would read again.
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