On Mon, 2007-03-26 at 06:42 -0500, Larry Rosenman wrote: > On Mon, 26 Mar 2007, Peter Jeremy wrote: > > > On 2007-Mar-25 23:55:26 -0500, Eric Anderson <anderson_at_freebsd.org> wrote: > >> On 03/25/07 09:34, Gavin Atkinson wrote: > >>> strings `sysctl -n kern.bootfile` | grep ^___ | sed -e 's/^___//' > >>> > >>> should still work if it was in a .comment section > >> > >> Unless you no longer have the running kernel, or it has changed since > >> the boot up of the system. A sysctl knob to dump it is *very* useful. > > > > Note that kern.bootfile will get updated during installkernel. I also > > can't think of a situation where I would have lost all copies of my > > running kernel as well as the config file that was used to build it. > > This could potentially happen if you ran two or more installkernels > > without rebooting but I can't think of any reason why I would do that: > > If a kernel builds, I am likely to try booting it before going onto > > something else. If a kernel doesn't build, it won't install. > > > > Overall, having the config file loaded strikes me as a waste of RAM. > > I had a weird situation where the /usr/src directory got trashed, but the > system was still up. I did *NOT* have a good copy of the config so had > to recreate it. ... but you had the running kernel in /boot/kernel? In which case, a .comment section would be fine. GavinReceived on Mon Mar 26 2007 - 11:13:17 UTC
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