On Fri, May 26, 2023 at 03:07:16PM +0200, Loic Poulain wrote: > Add an optional timeout arg to 'rootwait' as the maximum time in > seconds to wait for the root device to show up before attempting > forced mount of the root filesystem. > > This can be helpful to force boot failure and restart in case the > root device does not show up in time, allowing the bootloader to > take any appropriate measures (e.g. recovery, A/B switch, retry...). > > In success case, mounting happens as soon as the root device is ready, > contrary to the existing 'rootdelay' parameter (unconditional delay). > > Signed-off-by: Loic Poulain <loic.poulain@xxxxxxxxxx> > --- Not terribly opposed and not terribly convinced yet. So, we have rootdelay= with a timeout parameter that allows to specify a delay before attempting to mount the root device. And we have rootwait currently as an indefinite wait. Adding a timeout for rootwait doesn't seem crazy and is backwards compatible. But there's no mention of any concrete users or use-case for this which is usually preferable. If this is just "could be useful for someone eventually" it's way less desirable to merge this than when it's "here's a/multiple user/users"... So I would love to see a use-case described here. And this is only useful if there isn't an early userspace init that parses and manages root=. So we need to hit prepare_namespaces() as a rootwait timeout isn't meaningful if this is done by and early init in the initramfs for example.