Under which conditions would you not have /usr ? If it's on NFS or something? At any rate, putting /usr/bin in the path may not be *the* correct fix but it'd solve this problem for most people. Laptops are unlikely to have important parts of the filesystem mounted remotely.
I also disagree somewhat with setting importance to "low". The reason I looked into this in the first place was a time when my battery was close to empty and I booted up to check for some important e-mail. To my surprise the disks were fscked at boot, as far as I could tell with no way of interrupting the fsck. That time I did have enough battery to get to my e-mail, but it's an unpleasant surprise if you barely have enough battery to look up something important. -- Incorrect battery handling in checkfs.sh https://launchpad.net/bugs/59080 -- ubuntu-bugs mailing list [email protected] https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-bugs
