Date: Mon, 13 Mar 2006 23:42:45 -0500 From: "Tamouh H." <hakmi@rogers.com> To: <freebsd-questions@freebsd.org> Subject: RE: how does a system come up if you disable background fsck ? Message-ID: <20060314044240.C6F8543D46@mx1.FreeBSD.org> In-Reply-To: <4416483E.70600@ywave.com>
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> > Ensel Sharon wrote: > > I have disabled background fsck in my /etc/rc.conf with: > > > > background_fsck="no" > > > > But I am curious - what does this mean for the system if the system > > crashes ? > > > > Does this mean that the system will wait for all non root > partitions > > to fully fsck before coming up into multi-user mode ? > > > > OR > > > > Does it mean the system will boot up quickly into > multi-user mode, but > > the non-root partitions will just not be mounted and/or > usable until I > > fsck them by hand ? > > > > thanks. > > The former, as I can say with ample experience this morning. > (stupid USB > panic) > > HTH, > Micah I find both ways useless. If fsck background starts after a crash it literally slows down the machine to a halt rendering it unusable. If enable fsck to check the system prior to mounting device, it will take at least 15-30 minutes for it to complete (in the event of a hard crash). Which also translates to a downtime. disabling fsck on the long run is a bad choice too as eventually the system files will become corrupt beyond repair. What is the solution here ? Thx, Tamouh
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