Date: Thu, 8 Apr 1999 12:08:11 +0200 (CEST) From: Oliver Fromme <olli@dorifer.heim3.tu-clausthal.de> To: freebsd-stable@FreeBSD.ORG Subject: Re: How stable is soft updates? Message-ID: <199904081008.MAA19201@dorifer.heim3.tu-clausthal.de>
next in thread | raw e-mail | index | archive | help
jfesler@gigo.com wrote in list.freebsd-stable: > [about soft-updates] > 1: how stable is it :-) We're using it on some boxes in production use, no problems so far. One of them is a Squid web proxy, 512 Mb RAM, 3 x 9 Gb + 4.5 Gb disks, currently 800,000 files (and growing). > 2: If I somehow manage to boot from a kernel lacking soft updates, > will the partition still be mountable (ie, sans soft updates)? It will just work (but without soft-updates, of course). Soft- updates is not a special filesystem format or something like that, it uses just the normal Berkeley FFS/UFS format. The soft-update code just handles write access to such filesystems in a special way (which is enabled by a single flag in the "super block"). A kernel without soft-updates support will just ignore that flag and handle write access the usual way. > 3: How do we tunefs "/" ? Boot in single-user mode ("boot -s"), make sure that "/" is mounted read-only and is clean, tunefs, reboot. The following example assumes you're using your first SCSI disk: # mount /dev/da0s1a on / (local, read-only) # fsck /dev/rda0s1a ... # tunefs -n enable /dev/rda0s1a soft updates set # reboot It is not necesary to press the reset button (or even power- off the machine) like it was in pre-3.1 days. I'm not sure if it's necessary to reboot, it might even work to go multi- user immediately. In any case, "mount" will tell you afterwards if soft-updates was enabled successfully. Regards Oliver -- Oliver Fromme, Leibnizstr. 18/61, 38678 Clausthal, Germany (Info: finger userinfo:olli@dorifer.heim3.tu-clausthal.de) "In jedem Stück Kohle wartet ein Diamant auf seine Geburt" (Terry Pratchett) To Unsubscribe: send mail to majordomo@FreeBSD.org with "unsubscribe freebsd-stable" in the body of the message
Want to link to this message? Use this URL: <https://mail-archive.FreeBSD.org/cgi/mid.cgi?199904081008.MAA19201>