No I dont have the XFS file system. Fstab didn't have any special options as far as I know.
2009/3/7 Vijay Gill <[email protected]> > Do you have XFS as root file system? Do you have some some extra > options provided for it in /etc/fstab, like relatime etc? > > I did. And above that I had sent my brain for annual maintenance and I > decided to remove all previous kernels while I had nothing else to > think of. So here is how I got it fixed: > > 1. Downloaded boot.iso for FC10 from one of the mirrors and made my > USB key bootable using USB Creator. > 2. Booted the system using it in rescue mode. > 3. During the boot process of rescue mode, I allowed the mounting of > my hard disk partitions in read-write mode. > 4. Chroot'ed to /mnt/sysimage where my root partition was mounted. > 5. edited my /etc/fstab (note this is fstab of my system which broke) > and removed all other frills and just put 'defaults' as option for > mounting root partition. > 6. Forced re-install of the latest kernel (I still had the rpm lying > in yum cache). > 7. After that it was just normal sync, ctrl-d (to exit from chroot > shell), and reboot. > > And I had my system up and running. > > Even if it is not XFS, you have hit a bug I think, which i found > during my search today. > > Hope that helps. > > Vijay > > -- > fedora-list mailing list > [email protected] > To unsubscribe: https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-list > Guidelines: > http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Communicate/MailingListGuidelines >
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