I'd like to add a further comment to this bug. I have a computer running
Kubuntu Feisty with an external hard drive which is formatted with JFS.
At some point it was apparently removed from the computer without being
properly unmounted (I'm not sure if this was due to a system crash or
someone being careless as I'm not the only user of the computer, and it
happened when someone else was using it). The next time the external
drive was connected, as usual the KDE automount popup appeared, but when
a user attempted to access the disk it failed to mount. I'm afraid I
don't remember the exact error message it gave, but it wasn't too
helpful. I tried mounting the drive by hand, and that didn't work
either. I checked 'dmesg | tail' to see if any information appeared
there, and there was a message about JFS. I'm pretty sure that it didn't
mention anything about the drive being improperly unmounted, but I
guessed that this was the cause of the problem and ran fsck. Sure
enough, once fsck had run the drive mounted just fine.

The point I'm trying to make here is that while I've been using Linux
for a few years and didn't have too much trouble figuring out what the
problem was, the other users of the computer were stumped. The fact that
external drives are never fsck'ed is definitely a bad thing from the
point of view of data integrity, but if the automounter doesn't detect
when an external drive hasn't been properly unmounted and offer the
option of checking the system most users are going to be much more
confused when the drive won't mount, which I think is a more serious
problem.

I realise this isn't strictly an Ubuntu bug but exists upstream too.

-- 
ext 3 filesystems are never fsck'ed if they live on removable USB disks
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/85291
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