It is not clearly documented, but apparently fsck
(or, probably, getmntent) is using backslash as
escape character.

Label containing slash is converted to \x2f but '\'
is eaten by fsck later. Escape '\' before writing
into fstab.

Signed-off-by: Andrey Borzenkov <[email protected]>

---
 modules.d/95rootfs-block/mount-root.sh |    4 +++-
 1 files changed, 3 insertions(+), 1 deletions(-)

diff --git a/modules.d/95rootfs-block/mount-root.sh 
b/modules.d/95rootfs-block/mount-root.sh
index ff64209..493b54b 100755
--- a/modules.d/95rootfs-block/mount-root.sh
+++ b/modules.d/95rootfs-block/mount-root.sh
@@ -106,7 +106,9 @@ if [ -n "$root" -a -z "${root%%block:*}" ]; then
             done
     fi
 
-    echo ${root#block:} "$NEWROOT" "$rootfs" ${rflags},${rootopts} 1 1 > 
/etc/fstab
+    # backslashes are treated as escape character in fstab
+    esc_root=$(echo ${root#block:} | sed ',\\,\\\\,g')
+    echo "$esc_root" "$NEWROOT" "$rootfs" ${rflags},${rootopts} 1 1 > 
/etc/fstab
 
     if [ -z "$fastboot" -a "$READONLY" != "yes" ]; then
         info "Checking filesystems"
-- 
tg: (921f4b5..) upstream/rootdev (depends on: master)
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