According to Miquel van Smoorenburg <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>: > > 2. A filesystem check failed because there were serious errors and > the system wants you to run fsck manually It is not 1 and 3 so it must be 2. That sounds reasonable, because the "operator" (who had no idea what he was doing) read something about file system errors to us.
> If it was (2), you can prevent that by setting FSCKFIX=yes > in /etc/default/rcS. It will forcibly check all file systems and > repair them even if there are serious errors. This might result in > dataloss, but usually there isn't anything else you can do even > if you do run the fsck manually. Great! Thanks so much for that!!! Andy. -- Andy Spiegl, University of Technology, Muenchen, Germany E-Mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] URL: http://www.spiegl.de Finger [EMAIL PROTECTED] for my PGP key o _ _ _ --------- __o __o /\_ _ \\o (_)\__/o (_) ------- _`\<,_ _`\<,_ _>(_) (_)/<_ \_| \ _|/' \/ ------ (_)/ (_) (_)/ (_) (_) (_) (_) (_)' _\o_ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~