On Wed, Feb 4, 2009 at 3:00 PM, Paul Hartman <[email protected]> wrote: > On Wed, Feb 4, 2009 at 4:51 PM, Mark Knecht <[email protected]> wrote: >> On Wed, Feb 4, 2009 at 2:09 PM, Paul Hartman >> <[email protected]> wrote: >>> On Wed, Feb 4, 2009 at 12:05 PM, Mark Knecht <[email protected]> wrote: >>>> Recently my AMD64 machine has started displaying this message at boot >>>> time. I don't know exactly when it started but I suspect it was when I >>>> started testing a new kernel that didn't have the RTC enabled when I >>>> was first testing it. >>>> >>>> Anyway, what's the process of fixing this. It says it's 'fixed' at >>>> boot time but booting again does the same thing. I've got >>>> e2fsprogs/e2fsck but I'm not sure if it can be used on a mounted drive >>>> and I figured it best to ask first. >>> >>> check /etc/conf.d/hwclock and see if clock_systohc="YES" or "NO". >>> >>> I think default is NO, so your computer loses track of time until NTP >>> syncs over net again. >> >> I think it's /etc/conf.d/clock and mine has >> >> CLOCK_SYSTOHC="yes" >> >> Again, this is a relatively recent problem. Maybe a month ago it was >> fine, and then somewhere along the way it changed. >> >> I'm currently executing a 'shutdown -F -r now' command. It found the >> problem on the first partition, fixed it, rebooted, and that sector >> seems fixed. It's now working on the second sector. I'll have to see >> if that fixes all of them, and whether they stay fixed after a >> powerdown, etc. >> >> Thanks for the ideas. >> >> - Mark >> >> > > it is hwclock on my system. it belongs to sys-apps/openrc-0.4.2 which > you may not be using. > >
Ah, OK, I'm not using openrc. Anyway, I've been trying to fix it with fsck. Trying different options. Letting fsck fix it automatically, etc. so far nothing is fixing these problems. I don't know how to tell if the problem is really on the drive or whether it's caused by the clock not working.. the complaints are about 4 partitions: /dev/sda2 which is my root partition /dev/sda5, 7 & 9 which are partitions that are normally not automounted. I tried the fsck on reboot thing and I thought it fixed it - it said it had and had to reboot - but then on reboot it said it wasn't fixed. I also changed my fstab file to mount the 3 partitions that normally aren't mounted to be mounted and then did the fsck on reboot again. It runs through all the partitions, says it's fixing them, and then they still aren't finished. I'm leaning toward this being a clock problem but I've not run fsck by hand very often so I'm trying to be extra careful. - Mark
