> What does a dumpe2fs on that partition tell you about the defaults? which defaults? what line am I looking for?
# dumpe2fs -h /dev/myvg/rootvol dumpe2fs 1.39 (29-May-2006) Filesystem volume name: <none> Last mounted on: <not available> Filesystem UUID: b61120a0-f3b2-40ac-86db-16912c6582fd Filesystem magic number: 0xEF53 Filesystem revision #: 1 (dynamic) Filesystem features: has_journal ext_attr resize_inode dir_index filetype needs_recovery sparse_super large_file Default mount options: user_xattr acl Filesystem state: clean Errors behavior: Continue Filesystem OS type: Linux Inode count: 28737536 Block count: 28729344 Reserved block count: 1436467 Free blocks: 26926729 Free inodes: 28567537 First block: 0 Block size: 4096 Fragment size: 4096 Reserved GDT blocks: 1017 Blocks per group: 32768 Fragments per group: 32768 Inodes per group: 32768 Inode blocks per group: 1024 Filesystem created: Mon Dec 3 15:24:41 2007 Last mount time: Tue Dec 4 11:47:50 2007 Last write time: Tue Dec 4 11:47:50 2007 Mount count: 19 Maximum mount count: -1 Last checked: Mon Dec 3 15:24:41 2007 Check interval: 0 (<none>) Reserved blocks uid: 0 (user root) Reserved blocks gid: 0 (group root) First inode: 11 Inode size: 128 Journal inode: 8 First orphan inode: 11239436 Default directory hash: tea Directory Hash Seed: 599441e1-7c18-4303-a218-8e3e17649b56 Journal backup: inode blocks Journal size: 128M in any case, I was able to solve the problem by re-generating the initrd as suggested earlier. Although I still don't understand the logic in putting the fstab into the initrd. I thought that the grub root= line and the modules in the initrd were sufficient to do the switchroot. _______________________________________________ rhelv5-list mailing list [email protected] https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/rhelv5-list
