Clarify that what was previously known as -A root is now -A forceroot, not

-A softroot and that -A root can still be used for historical reasons.
This commit is contained in:
sborrill 2015-06-30 17:18:13 +00:00
parent 06ac39463d
commit 9a9013c60c

View File

@ -1,4 +1,4 @@
.\" $NetBSD: raidctl.8,v 1.67 2014/04/03 18:54:10 christos Exp $ .\" $NetBSD: raidctl.8,v 1.68 2015/06/30 17:18:13 sborrill Exp $
.\" .\"
.\" Copyright (c) 1998, 2002 The NetBSD Foundation, Inc. .\" Copyright (c) 1998, 2002 The NetBSD Foundation, Inc.
.\" All rights reserved. .\" All rights reserved.
@ -175,6 +175,16 @@ in the disklabel.
Note that only certain architectures Note that only certain architectures
.Pq currently alpha, amd64, i386, pmax, sandpoint, sparc, sparc64, and vax .Pq currently alpha, amd64, i386, pmax, sandpoint, sparc, sparc64, and vax
support booting a kernel directly from a RAID set. support booting a kernel directly from a RAID set.
Please note that
.Ic forceroot
mode was referred to as
.Ic root
mode on earlier versions of
.Nx .
For compatibility reasons,
.Ic root
can be used as an alias for
.Ic forceroot.
.It Fl A Ic softroot Ar dev .It Fl A Ic softroot Ar dev
Like Like
.Ic forceroot , .Ic forceroot ,
@ -1265,7 +1275,7 @@ partition of such a RAID set being used for
.Pa / . .Pa / .
To use raid0a as the root file system, simply use: To use raid0a as the root file system, simply use:
.Bd -literal -offset indent .Bd -literal -offset indent
raidctl -A root raid0 raidctl -A forceroot raid0
.Ed .Ed
.Pp .Pp
To return raid0a to be just an auto-configuring set simply use the To return raid0a to be just an auto-configuring set simply use the