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Date:      Tue, 25 Oct 2005 09:34:54 -0400
From:      John DeStefano <john.destefano@gmail.com>
To:        Beecher Rintoul <akbeech@gmail.com>,  Dimitar Vasilev <dimitar.vassilev@gmail.com>
Cc:        freebsd-questions@freebsd.org
Subject:   Re: updating in single-user mode
Message-ID:  <f2160e0d0510250634s2c591088i5e638d6baa5e49b2@mail.gmail.com>
In-Reply-To: <200510241712.11320.akbeech@gmail.com>
References:  <f2160e0d0510241524h4a2aae22yc26352e2d3bb5722@mail.gmail.com> <200510241712.11320.akbeech@gmail.com>

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On 10/24/05, Beecher Rintoul <akbeech@gmail.com> wrote:
> On Monday 24 October 2005 02:24 pm, John DeStefano wrote:
> > When updating world, section 20.4.5 of the handbook calls for dropping
> > to single user mode.  The reasons given for this make sense.  But this
> > is a problem for me: my BSD server does not have a local K/V/M setup
> > connected directly to it; it sits on my network and I connect to it
> > via PuTTy for administration.
> >
> > Is there a way to achieve single-user mode while still being able to
> > connect remotely (via LAN)?  (I know that's something of an oximoron,
> > but I needed to ask)  And if not, am I losing any serious
> > features/functionality of the update process by _not_ dropping into
> > single user?
> >
> > Thanks,
> > ~John
>
> I don't reccommend doing installworld or kernel in multiuser, but I have =
never
> had any problems doing it on a lightly loaded machine. With that said wha=
t
> could bite you is your new kernel not booting or something broken in
> userland. You will then need console access (serial or local) to fix it. =
I
> would set up your machine with serial console access and use a laptop or
> another machine when you reboot.
>
> Beech
> --
Thank you.

Because I'm impatient and obtuse, and because I was already in the
midst of the procedure when I received your replies, I decided to
proceed with the build world process from my LAN connection.  Believe
it or not, it went (or seemed to go) without a hitch, including the
updated kernel installation.

In your opinion, where/how would I check the new system to verify that
there were no breaks during the build and install processes, and that
the system is indeed fully updated?

Thanks,
~John

%uname -a
FreeBSD zurg.thedestefanos.com 5.4-STABLE FreeBSD 5.4-STABLE #0: Mon
Oct 24 22:27:33 EDT 2005   =20
root@zurg.thedestefanos.com:/usr/obj/usr/src/sys/MYKERNEL  i386



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