On Friday, 24 January 2003 at 20:34:24 +1000, Andy Farkas wrote: > >> I'm rather astounded. I'm currently at a Linux conference, and have >> of course been boasting about the stability of ufs, and today I had a >> crash which tore apart my /home file system. >> >> This is on a laptop, one which has been running -CURRENT for years >> with no trouble. At the moment it's running 5.0-RELEASE. Today I >> shut it down cleanly, and a couple of hours later rebooted it. It has >> three file systems, one of which came up dirty. fsck -y reported >> thousands of errors, and when it was finished, my home directory and >> some other files were gone, and all the subdirectories of my home >> directory were in lost+found, a total of 1.4 GB. Most of the errors >> appear to be duplicate Inode numbers. >> >> Obviously it's too late to work out what happened, but I thought it's >> worth mentioning in case somebody else is having the same trouble. > > I can only think that your disk is going bad.
That was one of my thoughts too. > Try a dd if=/dev/ad0 of=/dev/null and see if you get any read > errors. Nope, runs fine. It also doesn't explain why it happened at startup time. On Friday, 24 January 2003 at 6:53:41 -0500, Thomas David Rivers wrote: > > Don't be too hasty to blame UFS. I'm not. I've just reported what happened, in case others see it. On Friday, 24 January 2003 at 11:06:26 -0500, Robert Watson wrote: > Next time you run fsck -y in this scenario, log the output to an md > partition and stick it somewhere for analysis. At least, that was the > moral of the story last time I hosed a box in this form (incidentally, I > think it ended up being a failing hard disk). Yes, if you know it's going to happen. I could easily have written it to /var/tmp, which was mounted. I just wasn't expecting anything like this to happen. I've been using UFS on a daily basis for over 10 years, and this is the first time this has happened to me. I've been thinking about what happened, and I have a possibility: the session before shutdown included a lot of writing to that file system, and I did a shutdown -p. It's possible that the shutdown powered off the system before the disk had flushed its cache. For the moment I'm avoiding shutdown -p, but when I get home I'll try to provoke it again. Greg -- See complete headers for address and phone numbers To Unsubscribe: send mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with "unsubscribe freebsd-current" in the body of the message