On Jan 04 21:18:51, Jiri B wrote:
> On Thu, Jan 05, 2012 at 01:12:43AM +0000, Stuart Henderson wrote:
> > What's the advantage in having /etc on mfs? Why not just remount /
> > readonly after booting and mount it read/write when you need to make
> > changes? If you're looking at something more than this then take
> > a look at how flashboot does things but I'd only consider that in
> > special cases..
> 
> I wanted to separate service from (not much important) data thus I
> installed OpenBSD on little usb stick and dedicated normal disk
> for my own data (mp3, source repo, etc...). If the disk would go
> down, no problem, dns/ssh/pf etc would still work OK. (I'm ignoring
> here discussion if the problem is more disk or power supply.)

So you store your mp3's on your firewal and DNS server,
because you want to "separate service from data"?

> So why /etc on mfs? Maybe I'm thinking that always remounting rw /
> because little changement of a config file would be too much work when
> computers could do that for us invisible in background :)

"Always". How often do you edit /etc on the machine
that runs dns and pf for you?

Also, what does mfs have to do with this?

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