Hello Everyone,
   I feel like the answer here should be obvious, but either my google skills have deteriorated badly, I'm missing the obvious, or I've just run into a strange problem (which I doubt).

I have a Gentoo install with the following filesystem layout (from fstab):

/dev/sda2               /boot           ext3            noatime                 1 2
/dev/sda6               /               jfs             noatime                 1 1
/dev/sda3               none            swap            sw                      0 0
/dev/sda5               /var            jfs             noatime                 0 2
/dev/sda7               /home           jfs             noatime                 0 2

Things work fine under normal circumstances, however if the machine is powered off uncleanly (power button, power failure, etc) it refuses to boot. The problem seems to stem from the fact that the root partition does not get checked prior to mounting. I have the following grub stanza which boots the system. It includes the "ro" option which is supposed to tell the kernel to mount the root partition read-only at first to perform a fsck.

title=Gentoo Linux 2.6.12-r6
root (hd0,1)
kernel /kernel-genkernel-x86-2.6.12-gentoo-r6 root=/dev/ram0 init=/linuxrc ramdisk=8192 real_root=/dev/sda6 udev hda=ide-scsi hde=ide-scsi ro
initrd /initramfs-genkernel-x86-2.6.12-gentoo-r6

When booting this it basicly starts udev, then tries to mount filesystems and says /dev/sda6 is not a valid partition and drops me into busybox.

The way I'm able to recover this is to boot to the live CD, fsck.jfs /dev/sda6 and then reboot and the remaining filesystems fsck fine and the system boots. However, one thing I notice is that once / is unmounted unexpectedly, it cannot be mounted prior to an fsck (get errors from mount). This seems like a bit of a chicken & egg situation.

I can't believe this is a unique problem I've stumbled upon - does anyone have either an obvious answer to this question or some examples of a working gentoo install using jfs as the root partition (please, no responses of "yeah, works fine for me" if you can resist).

I'll happily provide more info as desired - but thought I'd start here.

Aaron

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