On Fri, 2008-06-13 at 11:25 +0200, David wrote: > But at other times I want to use the PC quickly for something, and > waiting for fsck to finish isn't an option. The problem is, hitting > Ctrl+C in the middle of boot fsck leaves your root partition in > read-only mode, and the machine has a lot of boot problems, and takes > a long time. I've tried this a few times this morning when I was in a > hurry (reboot, ctrl+c during fsck, hit boot problems so reboot again), > but in the end was forced to let fsck finish. > > Is there a way to interrupt the bootup fsck 'cleanly', so that it will > remount read/write, and retry the next time you boot?
This isn't the method you're looking for...if fsck runs, you shouldn't ever stop it. > Even better would be a way to get fsck to run in the background after > you're already logged into KDE. After / is already mounted? No. Read the fsck manpage. > Maybe not to actually fix problems (I > understand this is hard to do in r/w mode, while being actively used, > for technical reasons), but at leat to flag them for the next 'real' > fsck so they can be checked and fixed quickly then if they aren't > bogus... > > Any suggestions? Using hibernate instead of shutting down is probably best for home systems. Don't screw around with the mount counts/intervals. If you hibernate, you'll still be able to power off the machine when you're not using it, without having to sit through potentially long fscks. -- Paul Johnson [EMAIL PROTECTED]
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