Am 06.07.2022 um 22:24 schrieb Gregory Bartholomew
<gregory.lee.bartholomew(a)gmail.com>:
More for reference than really arguing that anyone should use it, here is an attempt I
made at scripting essentially what Chris recommended.
https://github.com/gregory-lee-bartholomew/bootsync
Sorry for my late reply. My current Fedora activities are filling my time frame more than
anticipated and unfortunately I can no longer reliably respond in a timely manner.
I studied your script and I think it is very well crafted - eventhough you don't think
it is ready for use yet.
I have never dealt with that problem before and am still trying to figure out exactly
where the problems are and what to do.
As far as I can see, the synchronization is done with standard file operations, nothing
outside the file system. Accordingly, the required contents are also distributed to the
disks by Raid. So the contents are in place.
An obvious issue is the type of the partition containing efi content, which is raid with
the Fedora (server) solution. Fedora (server) takes care of that, obviously, and performs
additional checks if it detects raid. As soon as you try to dual- or even multi-boot with
other systems, it will almost certainly end up faulty. From a mere sysadmin perspective, I
could hardly care less as long as Fedora (server) compensates. I don't want any other
inhabitants on my hardware.
From a systematic perspective this is quite dissatisfying. And from a pragmatic
perspective I would use it as long as it works and there is no better solution.