On 12/01/2017 21:12, Jeremie Le Hen wrote:> Hey Steven,
>
> (Please cc: me on reply)
>
> On Thu, Jan 12, 2017 at 1:32 AM, Steven Hartlan
>> The reason I'd recommend 512k for boot is to provide room for
expansion
>> moving forward, as repartitioning to upgrade is a scary / hard thing to
do.
>> Remember it wasn't long ago when it was well under 64k and
that's what was
>> recommend, its not like with disk sizes these days you'll miss the
extra
>> 384k ;-)
> Yeah, that's wise you're right.
>
>> Boot to a live cd, I'd recommend mfsbsd, and make sure the boot
loader was
>> written to ALL boot disks correctly e.g.
>> if you have a mirrored pool with ada0 and ada1:
>> gpart bootcode -b /boot/pmbr -p /boot/gptzfsboot -i 1 ada0
>> gpart bootcode -b /boot/pmbr -p /boot/gptzfsboot -i 1 ada0
>>
>> If this doesn't help the output from gpart show, uname -a and zpool
status
>> would also be helpful.
>>
>> This is all assuming standard BIOS mode and not UEFI which is done
>> differently.
> I just use the installation media on an USB key and then drop to the
> shell. This is a full FreeBSD running, so that's fine.
>
> % # gpart show ada0
> % => 40 312581728 ada0 GPT (149G)
> % 40 1024 1 freebsd-boot (512K)
> % 1064 8387840 2 freebsd-swap (4.0G)
> % 8388904 304192864 3 freebsd-zfs (145G)
> %
> % # uname -a
> % FreeBSD 11.0-RELEASE-p1 FreeBSD 11.0-RELEASE-p1 #0 r306420: Thu Sep
> 29 01:43:23 UTC 2016 % %
> root at releng2.nyi.freebsd.org:/usr/obj/usr/src/sys/GENERIC amd64
> %
> % # zpool status
> % pool: zroot
> % state: ONLINE
> % scan: none requested
> % config:
> %
> % NAME STATE READ
> WRITE CKSUM
> % zroot ONLINE 0
> 0 0
> % gptid/1c387d3b-d892-11e6-944b-f44d30620eeb ONLINE 0
> 0 0
> %
> % errors: No known data errors
>
> Here are the steps to write the bootloader:
>
> % # gpart bootcode -b /boot/pmbr -p /boot/gptzfsboot -i 1 ada0
> % partcode written to ada0p1
> % bootcode written to ada0
> % # zpool get bootfs zroot
> % NAME PROPERTY VALUE SOURCE
> % zroot bootfs zroot local
Two things spring to mind
Idea 1:
Is your root fs actually your direct pool or is it actually /root off
your pool.
If so you want to run:
zpool set bootfs=zroot/root zroot
Idea 2:
You mentioned in your original post and you used zfs send / recv to
restore the pool, so I wonder if your cache file is out of date.
Try the following:
|zpool export zroot
zpool import -R /mnt -o cachefile=/boot/zfs/zpool.cache zroot
cp /boot/zfs/zpool.cache /mnt/boot/zfs/zpool.cache
zpool set bootfs=zroot/root zroot
Regards
Steve
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