> Date: Mon, 8 Feb 2016 21:51:34 +0100 > From: Sven Eschenberg <sven@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> > If the data hasn't made it to the drive (or rather is not in transit) > then the change is just discarded leaving us in a stable state. Please read the first part of discussion below---in particular, Ted's description of the difference between SGI hardware of the day and typical PC-class hardware of the day. If we're analyzing the consistency of the various headers in the event that power is failing as we write them, it's not just about whether the write happened or not or whether the hardware sector is corrupted from the drive's perspective---it's also whether we can trust a sector the drive thinks is okay but turns out not to be from our standpoint. > > http://zork.net/~nick/mail/why-reiserfs-is-teh-sukc It is entirely possible that you could ask the drive to write garbage and it would succeed. It really isn't safe to make any assumptions about how an entire machine -might- work as power is failing; in general, the manufacturer (of any piece, much less the whole) has not guaranteed you anything about its behavior, and it could do anything. Just because -your- machine does something doesn't mean all users' machines out there will do the same thing. _______________________________________________ dm-crypt mailing list dm-crypt@xxxxxxxx http://www.saout.de/mailman/listinfo/dm-crypt