Sean Estabrooks pravi:

On Sat, 06 Sep 2003 22:30:57 +0200
Sasa Stupar <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:




Remember you can always check for yourself; what does
"man tune2fs" tell you is correct?   Is your filesystem actually
ext3 ?  Are you using the correct partition in place of the
/dev/hda2 used in the example above ?



Yes, my silesystem is ext3 and yes I am using correct partition which in my case is /dev/hdd1 and /dev/hdd2.




This is an interesting update. You are trying this with two partitions?
Doesn't that mean one of these is _not_your root partition?
If that's the case then you should be able to test all this with the
non root partition very easily without a kernel rebuild or boot time
parameters. All you need for a non root filesystem is a proper entry in your fstab file. Before you get to that step though, you can test it all out on the command line.


Still don't know what the issue is exactly with the "tune2fs" command
failing for you (old version perhaps? what did you find in "man"?). If you're still stuck, post the results of running "dumpe2fs -h" against your non-root partition, and the command lines you've tried.


Cheers,
Sean




hdd1 is a root partition and hdd2 is /boot partition. What to enter at boot time since I would like these two partitions to have writeback?


-- redhat-list mailing list unsubscribe mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/redhat-list

Reply via email to