Well, I've tried mounting and then unmounting my filesystem from an
earlier Ubuntu, and it stays "not clean" even unmounted. So, you can
forget my attempt to diagnose the problem. I'll guess the concerned
package is util-linux where we find fsck.

** Description changed:

  Ubuntu 12.04
  
- No idea about the package.
+ util-linux 2.20.1-1ubuntu3
  
  At absolutely every boot, fsck starts a disk drive check, causing a long wait 
with the message checking disk drives for errors. No error is found though, and 
the preceding shutdown is done regularly. Whether you let the check finish or 
cancel it, it will invariably keep coming up in the next boot.
  I've tried tune2fs -c 0 -i 0 [My boot drive], no difference. However, if I 
check with tune2fs -l , I see the command has worked fine though.
  I checked my boot partition from a live boot session with tune2fs -l, without 
mounting the partition of course, and saw that the filesystem state was set 
"not clean", whereas it wasn't mounted, which I guess is not normal and may be 
the cause for the needless systematic disk drive check. So, could the problem 
be when 12.04 unmounts the boot partition at shutdown?
  Many have the same issue and you can have a look at this forum thread : 
http://ubuntuforums.org/showthread.php?t=1973178
  
  This seems  hugely obvious however I can't see it's been reported...

** Changed in: ubuntu
       Status: Incomplete => New

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https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/998512

Title:
  Checking disk drives for errors at every boot

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