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Date:      Fri, 11 Oct 2002 09:33:29 -0700 (PDT)
From:      Kevin Stevens <Kevin_Stevens@pursued-with.net>
To:        Jerry McAllister <jerrymc@clunix.cl.msu.edu>
Cc:        questions@FreeBSD.ORG
Subject:   Re: CDROM boot time fsck
Message-ID:  <20021011091253.K1512-100000@babelfish.pursued-with.net>
In-Reply-To: <200210111604.g9BG48429757@clunix.cl.msu.edu>

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On Fri, 11 Oct 2002, Jerry McAllister wrote:

> > I happened to reboot my server last night without a disk in one of the
> > cdrom drives.  It caused the startup process to halt, dropping me to a
> > shell prompt as it tried to fsck the volume.  Wasn't happy proceeding
> > until I fed the drive a disk.  In my environment this is A Bad Thing;
> > there may be a disk in there or not, I need the freaking server to come up
> > and start running regardless.
> >
> > I checked my fstab, and the cdroms are listed thusly:
> >
> > /dev/acd0c              /cdrom          cd9660  ro,auto         0       0
> > /dev/acd1c              /cdrom1         cd9660  ro,auto         0       0
> >
> > Looking at the man page, the last column indicates the fsck type, and 0 is
> > supposed to mean that the device doesn't need to be checked during
> > startup.  Am I doing something wrong, or is something broken?
> > 4.6.2-STABLE, BTW.
>
> I think you also want to make it  'noauto'  rather than 'auto'.
> With the auto, you are telling it to try and mount the device and
> since there is no disk in, it can't.

Hmm.  I thought of that, but realistically wouldn't you WANT your cdroms
to be automount for just that reason - they're removable media, for
pete's sake.  I'm coming from a Solaris background, where this is handled
completely differently.

I guess I'm looking for the "best practice" method.

KeS


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