On 2/11/2019 4:52 PM, Carlos E. R. wrote:
On 12/02/2019 01.40, L A Walsh wrote:
But if the file-system driver isn't built how can the file system load? I mean things that I don't want/don't need on my system and know I am unlikely to use don't get built. At that point I'm not sure why I'd need a black list.
Obviously. But there are people that need those filesystems, and done your way they could not mount them. Some use such a filesystem as "/", so they could not even boot.
---- If such a file system was their 'root', wouldn't they likely also have their own kernel? I.e. what are they booting from if they have that file system as their 'root'? Seems to me they wouldn't be booting from *either*, a kernel that doesn't have it, NOR one that has it black listed (as it wouldn't load). Also, I better know how to rebuild the kernel than I would know how to change the blacklist (not that I couldn't look it up and find out). It's far easier to build the linux kernel than most software projects. There's little involved in making a kernel if you have it setup. But it would provide a small roadblock, perhaps a bit larger than editing a black list, but what you know how to do is almost always easier than that which you don't. -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse-factory+unsubscribe@opensuse.org To contact the owner, e-mail: opensuse-factory+owner@opensuse.org