On Wed, Jul 24, 2024 at 2:01 PM <04-psyche.tot...@icloud.com> wrote:

> Hi all,
>
> I have a machine that will be placed in a remote location, and have no
> physical access to. The connection will be made through ssh only.
>
> I'd like to make it as resilient to failure as possible.
>
> A big concern to me is for a disk failure to happen (say a power outage),
> and the machine to be rebooted in single user mode. At that point, the
> machine has no network access, and so I lose contact to it.
>
> Is there any way to disable going to single user mode when fsck is not
> happy?
>
> Is it reasonable to change the /etc/fstab to modify the fsck flag from 1
> and 2 to 0, to bypass the fsck checks ?
>
> Alternatively, is there a way to have ssh access in single user mode?
>
> Thanks!
> Jake
>

Can they give you an extra IP address??
If yes, take a look at this:
1. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cVWF3u-y-Zg
2.
https://www.jeffgeerling.com/blog/2022/blikvm-pcie-puts-computer-your-computer


-- 
Best regards,
Odhiambo WASHINGTON,
Nairobi,KE
+254 7 3200 0004/+254 7 2274 3223
 In an Internet failure case, the #1 suspect is a constant: DNS.
"Oh, the cruft.", egrep -v '^$|^.*#' ¯\_(ツ)_/¯ :-)
[How to ask smart questions:
http://www.catb.org/~esr/faqs/smart-questions.html]

Reply via email to