Date: Sat, 16 Apr 2005 18:46:03 -0400 From: "M. Parsons" <mrparsons@gmail.com> To: freebsd-hackers@freebsd.org Subject: Re: ext2 drives under 5.3 not umounting on reboots Message-ID: <426195AB.7010302@gmail.com> In-Reply-To: <20050416170356.E70414@eleanor.us1.wmi.uvac.net> References: <426173A4.90200@gmail.com> <20050416170356.E70414@eleanor.us1.wmi.uvac.net>
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c0ldbyte wrote: > -----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- > Hash: SHA1 > > On Sat, 16 Apr 2005, M. Parsons wrote: > >> I have a ext2 linux partition mounted under /linux via the fstab line: >> >> /dev/ad2s1 /linux ext2fs rw 1 2 >> >> It will automount on bootup, but if I do a reboot or shutdown -h now, >> it doesnt get umounted properly. In fact, if this /linux is mounted, >> then /, /usr, /var, and /tmp (all seperate ufs slices on another hard >> drive) also get tainted during a reboot. And on the next startup I >> get the good ole: WARNING: /usr was not properly dismounted, leaving >> me to fsck the drives in single mode (which sucks, as the fbsd >> machine is a headless NAT machine). Running fsck in single mode does >> fix everything. >> >> So whats going on here? reboot aint properly umounting partitions, >> and fsck doesnt seem to be properly running during bootup if it >> detects tainted filesystems. >> >> Any ideas? >> >> Freebsd 5.3 SMP kernel. > > > Try this line: > /dev/ad2s1 /linux ext2fs rw 0 0 > > But remember the ext2 code has been buggy for a while and is not allways > a good choice to try and do writes on it. Might be a better choice to > change rw to ro and to also check that drive/partition for errors with > its original fsck to fix any errors if there is any then it will most > likely mount properly and umount properly. > > Best of luck, > --c0ldbyte Well, I just said screw it, backed up the files I needed, then converted the whole disk to UFS. Time to wash my hands clean of linux anywas. :-) Still sort of worried that reboot wasnt unmounting the linux drive, but oh well, no more worries now. :) Mark
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