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Date:      Tue, 04 Jan 2005 20:25:20 +0900
From:      Rob <spamrefuse@yahoo.com>
To:        freebsd-stable@freebsd.org
Subject:   Re: fsck: broken file system with background check remains broken after bootup
Message-ID:  <41DA7D20.8000704@yahoo.com>
In-Reply-To: <20050104120204.74997852.gstewart@bonivet.net>
References:  <41DA6E6C.8030505@yahoo.com>	<20050104102627.GA5972@lb.tenfour> <20050104120204.74997852.gstewart@bonivet.net>

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Godwin Stewart wrote:
> -----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-----
> Hash: SHA1
> 
> On Tue, 4 Jan 2005 10:26:27 +0000, Dick Davies <rasputnik@hellooperator.net>
> wrote:
> 
> 
>>That won't happen, since /usr isn't mounted in single user mode.
> 
> 
> Even if it were, there are always "Live BSD" CDROMs which should allow you
> to boot and then fsck your disk partitions.

Thanks for your replies, but apparently I didn't make my point clearly.
Let me try again:

If the system ends with a bad filesystem, the background check may leave the
system unusable after bootup. For a FreeBSD guru this is indeed easy to fix
(single user mode, rescue floppies, live CDs bootup etc.).

However, the main user of this particular PC is not at all a guru; on 4.10
I had rc.conf configured such that at bootup all filesystems would be
automatically fixed with: fsck_y_enable="YES".
With 4.10, this always worked nicely, whatever sudden power cut have happened.

However, with 5.3, a recent powercut crippled  the /usr filesystem such that
X11 hanged. The user of this PC was convinced that FreeBSD was infected by a
virus :(.

An automatic fsck could have fixed the system (I eventually did it manually in
single user mode), but the background check left the system broken.....

So I want to configure 5.3 similar to former 4.10: a full automatic fix of all
filesystems at bootup, in case the system was not properly shutdown.
How can I do that?

Thanks,
Rob.



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