Dale <rdalek1...@gmail.com> wrote: > Alan McKinnon wrote: > > On Sunday 25 July 2010 06:57:43 KH wrote: > > > >>> You said you ran e2fsck and it was OK. What was the command? > >>> > >>> > >>> > >>> Normally with an e2fsck on a journalled fs, the app will replay the > >>> journal and make a few minor checks. This takes about 4 seconds, not > >>> the 40 minutes it takes to do a ful ext2 check. > >>> > >>> > >>> > >>> I think you might need to fsck without the journal. I know there's a way > >>> to do this but a cursory glance at the man page didn't reveal it. Maybe > >>> an ext user will chip in with the correct method > >>> > >>> > >>> > >>> > >>> > >> Hi, > >> > >> I ran on the two partitions e2fsck /dev/sde3 as well as fsck.ext3 > >> /dev/sde3 . Yes, it only took some seconds. > >> > > It's been a long time since I used ext3 so some of this might be wrong. > > > > An fsck that takes a few seconds is using the journal, which might not > > uncover > > deeper corruption. You should try disabling the journal (I couldn't find the > > way to do that though), but this will also work: > > > > Boot of a LiveCD, mount your root partition somewhere using type "ext2" and > > fsck it. This will invalidate the journal but that's OK, it gets recreated > > on > > the next proper boot. Let the fsck finish - it will take a while on a large > > fs. > > > > When done, reboot as normal and see if the machine boots up properly. > > > > > > > > And I would stand guard to make sure housekeeping doesn't come around. > ;-) Cutting power during all this wold not be good.
You don't need to invalidate the journal or mount ext2, just use -f if memory serves, be sure the partition is unmounted and that will force a full check. -- Your life is like a penny. You're going to lose it. The question is: How do you spend it? John Covici cov...@ccs.covici.com