however disabling fsck leaves you with the risk of running a corrupted filesystem.
you are much better off recreating the filesystem each boot (and it's faster than fsck) David Lang On Sun, 21 Mar 2010, Olivier Tharan wrote: > On Sat, Mar 20, 2010 at 6:37 PM, Dan Parsons <[email protected]> wrote: >> One thing that immediately comes to mind is it will be fsck'd every >> time it's not unmounted cleanly (as opposed to just having its journal >> replayed for ext3). > > It's just a single-char change in /etc/fstab to disable fsck. > _______________________________________________ Tech mailing list [email protected] http://lopsa.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/tech This list provided by the League of Professional System Administrators http://lopsa.org/
