On 2/21/2012 5:57 AM, Boris Epstein wrote: > Things like boot process rarely break. I can't remember the last time I caused a system to outright fail to boot, but I *do* get unclean boots regularly. Examples: - Build and install some needed driver from source, yum upgrade repeatedly, implicitly upgrade kernel, forget to rebuild the driver against the new kernel, reboot, boom. - Get asked to configure the foo service, get it all working, forget to add it to init.d, use it happily for months, reboot, fail to notice the service's absence until someone gives a misleading bug report. ("The foo service has crashed!") Then I have to go chasing it, handicapped by being half a year separated from the last time I looked at it. What with the long uptimes on our servers and their many-hattedness, I'd say chances are actually fairly low that any given reboot will bring it 100% back to the state it was in when we shut it down. Something boot-related almost *always* changes between reboots. I've made it a policy that if you get an unclean reboot, you fix it in such a way that it should come up cleanly, then test by rebooting. Repeat until all symptoms are fixed. But, never believe you've thereby guaranteed that it will come up cleanly the next time. _______________________________________________ CentOS mailing list CentOS@xxxxxxxxxx http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos