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Date:      Fri, 2 Feb 2001 20:41:56 -0600 (CST)
From:      Anatoly Karp <karp@math.wisc.edu>
To:        freebsd-questions@freebsd.org
Subject:   [Q] your first BSD crash - what lessons to learn?..
Message-ID:  <200102030241.f132fut00986@tolik.localdomain>

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Hello all,

It may have happened to many of you, but
today my (home PC) FreeBSD-4.2-stable crashed for the first time 
in my life (during port 'make install' if that's important)
rendering /usr corrupted.

in the end fsck fixed it quite easily, but during
first hours of shock and confusion I was wondering:

what could have been done to be better prepared
for this occasion (which would only happen to other
guys, I used to think)?

is my understanding correct that I should have
made /home a separate slice, so my user files
are not endangered by (certain kinds of) system
crashes? is it correct that the only way to achieve
this now would be to reformat the disk and reinstall
from sources?

Generally, can you please post any personal tips
and tricks that might be relevant in this respect?

Also, are there any good pointers on unix file system
after-crash recovery? (I hope I won't become a frequent
user of those)

Thanks,
Anatoly




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