On Thu, 2003-10-02 at 02:46, Sharrea Day wrote:
> On Wed, 01 Oct 2003 18:48, Raffaele Belardi wrote:
> > I think e2fschk is a front end that invokes the correct fsck.* program.
> > If you type man fsck.ext3 you are shown the e2fschk man page.
> >
> > On my MDK9.1 there is no fsck.reiserfs command,
On Wed, 01 Oct 2003 18:48, Raffaele Belardi wrote:
> I think e2fschk is a front end that invokes the correct fsck.* program.
> If you type man fsck.ext3 you are shown the e2fschk man page.
>
> On my MDK9.1 there is no fsck.reiserfs command, only fsck.ext3. Could it
> be an alias?
How 'bout /sbin/r
On Wed, 01 Oct 2003 17:03:29 +0200
Raffaele Belardi <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I use Journalling FS too (ext3) and, according to "man", e2fsck can
> process ext3 also:
>
> "E2fsck also supports ext2 filesystems countaining a journal, which
> are also sometimes known as ext3 filesystems, by fi
I use Journalling FS too (ext3) and, according to "man", e2fsck can
process ext3 also:
"E2fsck also supports ext2 filesystems countaining a journal, which are
also sometimes known as ext3 filesystems, by first applying the journal
to the filesystem before continuing with normal e2fsck proces
I think e2fschk is a front end that invokes the correct fsck.* program.
If you type man fsck.ext3 you are shown the e2fschk man page.
On my MDK9.1 there is no fsck.reiserfs command, only fsck.ext3. Could it
be an alias?
The command should output something. In my case the output is (hda1 is
an
On Tue, 2003-09-30 at 02:55, Raffaele Belardi wrote:
> Or bad disk.I've had two disks breaking up recently, behaviour is always
> _very_ strange.
> You could check partitions with
>
> # e2fschk -f -c /dev/hda?
>
> -f forces the check
> -c performs bad block scan (I've never done this, don't know
Or bad disk.I've had two disks breaking up recently, behaviour is always
_very_ strange.
You could check partitions with
# e2fschk -f -c /dev/hda?
-f forces the check
-c performs bad block scan (I've never done this, don't know how long it
takes)
Substitute hda? with the name of your partitions
On Monday 29 September 2003 08:52 pm, Terence J. Golightly wrote:
> I don't think it is really a virus only that I noticed this on the POST.
> It just reminds me of the bad old days of dos viri. I am having some
> strange things happening when it starts. fsck apparently check all my
> partitions
On Mon, 2003-09-29 at 18:49, Glenn Wright wrote:
> On Mon, 2003-09-29 at 17:13, Mark Weaver wrote:
>
>
>
> Mark;
> I think he's referring to the series of steps in
> http://www.mandrakeuser.org/docs/mdoc/ref/ts-system-freeze.html
>
>
>
> ___
On Mon, 2003-09-29 at 18:13, Mark Weaver wrote:
> Terence J. Golightly wrote:
> > List,
> >
> > I just started my machine after leaving it off while away from home. I
> > noticed that when I booted the machine, right over the third? column
> > where the devices are listed with there associated int
On Mon, 2003-09-29 at 17:13, Mark Weaver wrote:
Mark;
I think he's referring to the series of steps in
http://www.mandrakeuser.org/docs/mdoc/ref/ts-system-freeze.html
> Hi Terry,
>
> I seriously doubt you've got a virus. If you do, and I don't think thats
> what it is, then that would b
Terence J. Golightly wrote:
List,
I just started my machine after leaving it off while away from home. I
noticed that when I booted the machine, right over the third? column
where the devices are listed with there associated interrupts was a
rectangular section colored green with four greek letter
List,
I just started my machine after leaving it off while away from home. I
noticed that when I booted the machine, right over the third? column
where the devices are listed with there associated interrupts was a
rectangular section colored green with four greek letters shaped like
"Es" (I can't
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