On Wednesday 13 April 2011 01:45:43 Bill Kenworthy wrote:
On Tue, 2011-04-12 at 14:52 -0500, Paul Hartman wrote:
On Tue, Apr 12, 2011 at 12:31 PM, Grant emailgr...@gmail.com wrote:
Sometimes the ext3 forced volume check at boot triggers at an
inopportune time. Is there a way to skip it
Sometimes the ext3 forced volume check at boot triggers at an
inopportune time. Is there a way to skip it and let it run at the
next boot?
- Grant
@lists.gentoo.org
Sent: Tue, April 12, 2011 1:31:31 PM
Subject: [gentoo-user] Can a forced volume check be interrupted?
Sometimes the ext3 forced volume check at boot triggers at an
inopportune time. Is there a way to skip it and let it run at the
next boot?
- Grant
On Tue, Apr 12, 2011 at 10:50:56AM -0700, BRM wrote:
Probably, but why would you want to? it fixes any errors, and makes the file
system relatively clean again so that things function well - and things don't
get lost.
If you skip it, you risk data corruption on disk.
That misses the point.
Probably, but why would you want to? it fixes any errors, and makes the file
system relatively clean again so that things function well - and things don't
get lost.
If you skip it, you risk data corruption on disk.
That misses the point. I have rebooted sometimes just for a quick
change,
- Original Message
From: Grant emailgr...@gmail.com
Probably, but why would you want to? it fixes any errors, and makes the
file
system relatively clean again so that things function well - and things
don't
get lost.
If you skip it, you risk data corruption on disk.
Probably, but why would you want to? it fixes any errors, and makes the
file
system relatively clean again so that things function well - and things
don't
get lost.
If you skip it, you risk data corruption on disk.
That misses the point. I have rebooted sometimes just for a quick
- Original Message
From: Grant emailgr...@gmail.com
To: gentoo-user@lists.gentoo.org
Sent: Tue, April 12, 2011 3:29:35 PM
Subject: Re: [gentoo-user] Can a forced volume check be interrupted?
Probably, but why would you want to? it fixes any errors, and makes the
file
system
On Tue, Apr 12, 2011 at 12:31 PM, Grant emailgr...@gmail.com wrote:
Sometimes the ext3 forced volume check at boot triggers at an
inopportune time. Is there a way to skip it and let it run at the
next boot?
Not once it has started, but there are some ways to avoid it running
in the first
On Tue, Apr 12, 2011 at 2:52 PM, Paul Hartman
paul.hartman+gen...@gmail.com wrote:
If it's an ext[123] you can use tune2fs -i 0 to set the auto-check
interval to never.
oops, I of course meant 234 not 123 :)
On Tue, 2011-04-12 at 14:52 -0500, Paul Hartman wrote:
On Tue, Apr 12, 2011 at 12:31 PM, Grant emailgr...@gmail.com wrote:
Sometimes the ext3 forced volume check at boot triggers at an
inopportune time. Is there a way to skip it and let it run at the
next boot?
Not once it has started,
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