On Wed, 18 Apr 2012 21:19:09 +0200, Steven Post wrote: > I have this really annoying problem when I shutdown the machine using > sudo /sbin/shutdown -h +1 > The machine seems to properly shutdown, but I always (at least I think) > get the message that a filesystem contains errors and needs to be > checked. When I use the shutdown option in Gnome, the system boots fine > without the fsck.
And is it true that there were errors? What does the "fsck" log say? I wonder what difference can be in shutting down from GNOME and doing it from the command line, mmm... >:-? > This is really annoying, especially as both / and /boot are on an SSD, > the system that is checked is always another rotational hard disk > mounted on /home. > > The problem started when I reinstalled Debian Wheezy on the new SSD, > using the AMD64 architecture. At the same time I got rid of an old, > unused, partition on the HDD and extended the existing ext4 partition to > include the newly claimed space. All this using the Debian installer. > Before the reinstall the system was running Wheezy on the i386 > architecture and the now extended partition was already used as /home, > it was not changed other then extending it. > > Any ideas? One dumb idea, yup. Before you shutdown the system from command line, logout from your current GNOME session, go to a tty and then run the shutdown sequence from there. Is the "fsck" still coming up when you boot? Greetings, -- Camaleón -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-user-requ...@lists.debian.org with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact listmas...@lists.debian.org Archive: http://lists.debian.org/jmpi51$kai$1...@dough.gmane.org