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Re: how to fsck



Hi, thanks for the reply.  Actually my loops are set on startup with an init 
script, so my fstab is plain except it uses /dev/loop2 instead of /dev/md0.  
I can happly mount and unmount it like an unencrypted drive.

If i start the system and log in as root, mount the partition, sync, is it 
ok to do a fsck on a mounted fs as no files are open?

This problem is most probably caused because the drives are never unmounted 
when the system shuts down, their always "busy" at the time.  I can prob fix 
that by looking into the shutdown script.s

Brad.

>On correctly set up box, umount detaches loop, so file system data won't be
>there for fsck to find. If you have loop mount options defined in
>/etc/fstab, do this:
>
>umount /home
>losetup -F /dev/loop2
>fsck -t ext3 -f -y /dev/loop2
>losetup -d /dev/loop2
>mount /home
>
>Regards,
>Jari Ruusu <jari.ruusu@pp.inet.fi>

> >My encrypted /home/ mounts and works fine, but i can't fsck it.  I 
> >unmount it, and try fsck /dev/loop2 but i'm told there's no first or 
> >second superblock.  The /dev/loop2 loop still exists with definatly >the 
>correct password as i can remount it without being prompted for >a 
>password.
> >
> >Its ext3 on a software raid5 looping through /dev/md0.  Am i fscking >the 
>wrong place? or, since it mounts ok still, should i copy the >files off to 
>another drive, recreate filesystem, then copy files >back?
> >
> >Thanks,
> >Brad.
> >

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