https://bugzilla.novell.com/show_bug.cgi?id=175939 ------- Comment #13 from knocte@gmail.com 2006-10-18 05:15 MST ------- Thanks for your impressions Stefan.
Often the windows partitions will be mounted in Linux.
But in this case GRUB doesn't control the hibernation state of Windows, so it would allow booting on Linux although the Windows partition is inconsistent. So here we are discussing the opposite case: mount Linux partitions from Windows or from other Linux partition. Let me then dive a little bit more into this general issue, because I think we could reach a point where everybody agrees. The problem here is that this issue cannot be resolved so as to avoid the use of an inconsistent partition. But users without this potential problem get this safety feature without needing it. When an hibernation (suspend to disk) takes in place, can't the OS mark the partitions in use as "dirty" so as to let a potential mounter of the partition know it and be stopped from doing it? Perhaps the thing I am proposing implies a new feature in the filesystem standard itself and on the mounting utilities. With this being done, we would catch the best of both worlds: safety for inconsistent partitions and the possibility for booting between OS's for people who don't use shared partitions or who knows that they won't be able to mount them until they shutdown the hibernated filesystems. I am just throwing my thoughts in the air. Please feel free to warn me about the issues that this idea could arise, or the limitations that could prevent it to be implemented. -- Configure bugmail: https://bugzilla.novell.com/userprefs.cgi?tab=email ------- You are receiving this mail because: ------- You are on the CC list for the bug, or are watching someone who is.