On Wednesday, January 17, 2007 @ 3:25 PM, I wrote: >Well, I've done some more digging on this problem and, though I have found >out some things, I am still no closer to solving the problem than before.
>1) The huge amount of lines in /var/log/messages seems to be unrelated to >why I'm getting an fsck every time I boot. There are hundreds of lines in >there that look like this one -- >Linux kernel: SFW2-IN-ACC-RELATED IN eth0 >OUT=MAC=00:08:74:24:85:82:00:04:5A:0f:18:07:08:00 SRC=128.61.111.11 >DST=192.168.1.102 LEN=529 TOS=0x00 PREC=0x00 TTL=64 ID=238936 WINDOW=1716 >RES=0x00 ACK FIN URGP=0 OPT (long hex number here) >The DST address is my machine's internal address. I checked several of the >SRC addresses and they seemed to all be ZEN/YOU mirrors. So, this would >appear to be some ZEN glitch (if so, what's new). I wouldn't think this >would have anything to do with my getting the fscks every time I boot. >2) When I finally scrolled back across thousands of lines of the above and >got to the beginning of the startup process, there were no messages that >indicated any type of problem, disk related or otherwise. >3) I tried "tune2fs -c 99 /dev/hda2" and it came back and said "Setting >maximal mount count to 99". However, I still get an fsck every time I boot >up. >So, at this point I'm stumped. There doesn't seem to be any error message >coming out and yet it just automatically does an fsck every time I boot. >I'm going to look at some of the other files in /var/log to see if I can >find one with some sort of message in it that would point me to why this is >happening. Don't know what else to do at this point. >Greg Wallace I just noticed the following lines ahead of the fsck in the log -- Invoking userspace resume from /dev/hda1 resume: Could not stat configuration file resume: libgcrypt version: 1.2.3 resume: Could not read the image Invoking in-kernel resume from /dev/hda1 <-- swap Waiting for device /dev/hda2 to appear ok fsck... Could the fact that it's trying to do a resume and is unable to be the cause of the problem? I really don't need resume from disk anyway. How can I turn that off? I'll start looking for that setting under /etc/sysconfig Editor. Greg W -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
