That's not allowed if system drops you to a root shell during boot when fsck
fails to correct all errors. Instruction on screens says, Run fsck manually
without -a or -y option.

Happened to me yesterday when great MSEB took a vacation when I was uninstalling
kernel source rpm....

 Shridhar


Jiju Thomas Mathew wrote:

> > Yes, fsck -a is automatic. But it is not recommended probably
> > because the linux developers feel all the users are expers too :) Although
> > I just type yes for everything and hoping it will correct the problem.
> >
> better do fsck <device> -y
> and forget the prompts


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