Re: e2label suggestions

From: Jeff V. Merkey
Date: Tue Mar 28 2006 - 18:30:54 EST


Theodore Ts'o wrote:

On Tue, Mar 28, 2006 at 02:48:50PM -0700, Jeff V. Merkey wrote:


e2label takes as parms:

e2label <device name> <mount point>



Actually, it's label name, not "mount point". Some
people/distributions will use a label name of "/" for the root
filesystem, but that is purely a convention.



What's useless about this is the association of device name and file system label which is completely broken on SATA systems which do dynamic
assignment. e2label was a great idea, but did not go far enough to abstract.


It's not an association of device name and file system label. It is
an assignment of a filesystme label to a *filesystem*. The label is
actually stored in the ext3's superblock.



The Initial mount sequence using:

root=LABEL=/

should be modified to ignore the device assignment and dunamically scan the drives for the root drive for initial bootup and DETECT
the device assignment rather then reverting to fixed device assignments. As implemented it's pretty useless and is simply an aliasing
mechanism rather than solving the problem of the system being truly dynamic.


You can do this, and on some distributions it does work that way; the
initial root device is actually an initrd, and the initrd will search
the drivers looking for the root drive. The blkid library, or the
blkid program, can be used provide that functionality (indeed the
mount program, when passed the argument "LABEL=/" can be compiled to
use the blkid library to do this searching).

So it does (or at least can) work this way already, but it's all
userspace stuff which is currently distro-specific. Which brings up
the question why you posted this on LKML....

- Ted


Ted,

Thanks for clarifying. It does NOT work this way today, and the detection of and translation of
LABEL=/ is passed in the kernel, so its a kernel issue. e2label also originated here, and yes I know about where
its stored. I will modify the kernels we use to translate this into a dynamic device handle. What
the rest of the world does is its problem. I was making a suggestion. See subject = "suggestions".

Thanks for responding. This has been helpful.

Jeff

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