On Sat, 23 Jun 2012 12:57:01 +0200, Julian H. Stacey wrote:
> > My suggestion: Set background_fsck="YES" in /etc/rc.conf and let
> > the system boot up that way. _If_ you have a faulty disk or other
> > data corruption, you'll notice this _before_ going multi-user and
> > maybe making things worse.
> My suggestion: Set background_fsck="YES" in /etc/rc.conf and let
> the system boot up that way. _If_ you have a faulty disk or other
> data corruption, you'll notice this _before_ going multi-user and
> maybe making things worse. Yes, it might take some time, but it's
> time well invested in your
Hi, since a few of days ago, I noticed my home server turns very slow more than once a
day, so every time I run "top" to see what's processes are running, I can see
fsck_ufs at the very top, and the hard drive working like mad.
background_fsck=NO in /etc/rc.conf
I've checked my crontab and
On Fri, 22 Jun 2012 14:56:39 -0700 (PDT), Leonardo M. Ramé wrote:
> Hi, since a few of days ago, I noticed my home server turns very
> slow more than once a day, so every time I run "top" to see
> what's processes are running, I can see fsck_ufs at the very
> top, and the hard drive working like ma
On Fri, 22 Jun 2012 14:56:39 -0700 (PDT)
Leonardo M. Ramé wrote:
> Hi, since a few of days ago, I noticed my home server turns very slow
> more than once a day, so every time I run "top" to see what's
> processes are running, I can see fsck_ufs at the very top, and the
> hard drive working like ma
Hi, since a few of days ago, I noticed my home server turns very slow more than
once a day, so every time I run "top" to see what's processes are running, I
can see fsck_ufs at the very top, and the hard drive working like mad.
I've checked my crontab and there's nothing related to fsck_ufs, whe