Re: quiting fsck

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Dirk Jagdmann wrote:

I only use journaled ext3, so I can quickly bring up my system again if it crashed. I disabled maximal mount count and timespam, so I won't be surprised by fsck at system boot. If my system is working without problems I do an fsck run from time to time, if I don't need my computer (lunch breaks come in handy) with a "touch /forcefsck;reboot", so I don't have filesystem curruptions.

Makes sense, I'll try that for a while.

A question: I touched /forcefsck and at reboot /, /home and / (again) gets fsck'ed. But this is my /etc/fstab

# /etc/fstab: static file system information.
#
# <file system> <mount point>   <type>  <options>       <dump>  <pass>
proc            /proc           proc    defaults        0       0
/dev/hda2       /               ext3    defaults,errors=remount-ro 0       1
/dev/hda4       /mnt/data       ext3    defaults        0       2
/dev/hda1       /mnt/unstable   ext3    defaults        0       2
/dev/hda3       none            swap    sw              0       0
/dev/hdc        /media/cdrom0   iso9660 ro,user,noauto  0       0

How do I force /mnt/data to get fsck'ed, or am I missing something here?

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