Bug 39607

Summary: at boot , initscripts always check root partition
Product: [Retired] Red Hat Linux Reporter: Marius Onica <omar>
Component: initscriptsAssignee: Bill Nottingham <notting>
Status: CLOSED WONTFIX QA Contact: David Lawrence <dkl>
Severity: medium Docs Contact:
Priority: medium    
Version: 7.1CC: joel, rvokal
Target Milestone: ---   
Target Release: ---   
Hardware: i386   
OS: Linux   
URL: univ.uoradea.ro
Whiteboard:
Fixed In Version: Doc Type: Bug Fix
Doc Text:
Story Points: ---
Clone Of: Environment:
Last Closed: 2005-02-22 20:45:50 UTC Type: ---
Regression: --- Mount Type: ---
Documentation: --- CRM:
Verified Versions: Category: ---
oVirt Team: --- RHEL 7.3 requirements from Atomic Host:
Cloudforms Team: --- Target Upstream Version:
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Description Flags
Patch to /etc/rc.d/rc.sysinit to avoid running fsck on reiserfs partitions none

Description Marius Onica 2001-05-08 10:57:08 UTC
From Bugzilla Helper:
User-Agent: Mozilla/4.77 [en] (X11; U; Linux 2.4.2-2 i686)

Description of problem:
if on root partition is a reiserfs filesystem at boot the operating
system always want to check the filesystem

How reproducible:
Always

Steps to Reproduce:
1.halt
2.boot
3.
	

Actual Results:  At this sequence from the rc.sysinit the system always
stops and
asks if I want to perform a fsck 
if [ -z "$fastboot" -a "$ROOTFSTYPE" != "nfs" ]; then
 
        STRING=$"Checking root filesystem"
        echo $STRING
	initlog -c "fsck -T -a $fsckoptions /"
        rc=$?


Additional info:

Comment 1 Bill Nottingham 2001-05-08 15:31:57 UTC
Doesn't the reiserfs fsck Do The Right Thing if it's unmounted cleanly?

Assigning to reiserfs-utils.

Comment 2 Bernhard Rosenkraenzer 2001-05-09 09:45:20 UTC
It doesn't do the right thing because reiserfs fsck is ultimately broken 
(which is one of the reasons we aren't supporting it on root filesystems).

-T isn't implemented at all (will fix), -a is supposed to enter a "do nothing 
mode" (and doesn't work).

Looking into it.


Comment 3 Nikita Danilov 2001-05-14 11:22:09 UTC
ReiserFS doesn't require fsck utility, because it provides meta-data journalling.
/sbin/reiserfsck is to repair fs corrupted due to internal kernel error of disk
IO error,
it's not a substitute for the traditional fsck and requires interaction with user
most of the time. Proper way to fix this is either modify rc scripts or symlink
/sbin/fsck.reiserfs to /bin/true.


Comment 4 fsolari 2001-08-01 23:10:34 UTC
Just as Nikita says, Reiser FS is not to be checked 'automatically' by the 
utility, so it's better to put 0 0 at the 5th and 6th fields in /etc/fstab
for any Reiser Filesystem you have.



Comment 5 David Rees 2001-08-03 16:34:56 UTC
Any chance this fix will be making it into initscripts?

As Nikita said, linking /sbin/fsck.reiserfs to /bin/true is one fix, other other is to fix /etc/rc.sysinit with the patch I will be attaching.

Comment 6 David Rees 2001-08-03 16:38:35 UTC
Created attachment 26092 [details]
Patch to /etc/rc.d/rc.sysinit to avoid running fsck on reiserfs partitions

Comment 7 Bernhard Rosenkraenzer 2001-08-03 16:41:12 UTC
Assigning back to initscripts - I don't think fixing reiserfsck would be such a good 
idea (would break compatibility with everyone else, and doing it right would mean 
rewriting reiserfs ;) )


Comment 8 Bill Nottingham 2001-08-03 18:42:56 UTC
I object to the general idea of reiserfsck being handled differently than other
filesystems. If it's not meant to be run generally, don't put the binary there
with that name.

Comment 9 Bill Nottingham 2005-02-22 20:45:50 UTC
Closing out bugs on older, no longer supported releases. Apologies for any lack
of response.