however disabling fsck leaves you with the risk of running a corrupted 
filesystem.

you are much better off recreating the filesystem each boot (and it's 
faster than fsck)

David Lang

On Sun, 21 Mar 2010, Olivier Tharan wrote:

> On Sat, Mar 20, 2010 at 6:37 PM, Dan Parsons <[email protected]> wrote:
>> One thing that immediately comes to mind is it will be fsck'd every
>> time it's not unmounted cleanly (as opposed to just having its journal
>> replayed for ext3).
>
> It's just a single-char change in /etc/fstab to disable fsck.
>
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