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    ext3 filesystem check

    suggestion.

    with filesystem getting bigger and bigger (500gb, 1tb, ...)
    a filesystem check may take a very long time to complete.

    if developers want to keep this "feature", i'd suggest they
    at least background the checks where/when possible.

    so that systems can at least boot up without people having
    to wait 15 minutes or more in front of a progress bar...

    cheers

    ps:
    i know i can tune my ext3.
    i also know how to do it.
    but most of the windoze refugees don't.
    gnu/linux is not windoze

    #2
    Re: ext3 filesystem check

    Or folks could use reiserfs. It doesn't require this check.

    I personally use Ext3 and have changed mine to check every 50 boots. I think for a normal home user, 50-100 is fine.

    txWingMan

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      #3
      Re: ext3 filesystem check

      There is AutoFsck , with it you can easily modify diskchecks. Here fsck is done at shutdown:

      Topic: Fsck on Shutdown
      http://kubuntuforums.net/forums/inde...opic=3088866.0


      Before you edit, BACKUP !

      Why there are dead links ?
      1. Thread: Please explain how to access old kubuntu forum posts
      2. Thread: Lost Information

      Comment


        #4
        Re: ext3 filesystem check

        thanks folks.
        as i posted earlier...i know i can tune things.

        but the users i'm talking about:
        a) don't know (and don't want to know) about filesystems
        b) don't know (and don't want to know) about other filesystems
        c) don't know (and don't want to know) what a fsck is

        and they ask me questions such as:
        a) if this other filesystem doesn't need to be checked, why then this one does?
        b) if this other filesystem doesn't need to be checked, then it must be better, isn't it?
        c) and if this other filesystem is better, then why does *ubuntu use this crap one?
        d) and what is a filesystem anyway?

        the bottom line is:
        why does ext3 need to be checked at all?
        technically, i mean, why is that?

        cheers
        gnu/linux is not windoze

        Comment


          #5
          Re: ext3 filesystem check

          Originally posted by jankushka
          why does ext3 need to be checked at all?
          technically, i mean, why is that?
          This is an old post from Red Hat, but it has an explanation of the move from the ext2 to ext3 filesystem. It states that "...ext3 does not require a file system check, even after an unclean system shutdown, except for certain rare hardware failure cases (e.g. hard drive failures)." Interesting. Unless their statement is totally out in left field, my guess would be that the reason filesystem checks are still performed on ext3 filesystems (at least in *ubuntu) is due to inertia (it was being done prior to ext3 and the practice was continued), that, or the analyzed risk in not doing it was deemed to be greater than not doing it.

          I'm sure that someone with more knowledge on the subject will add to or correct me on this.
          Windows no longer obstructs my view.
          Using Kubuntu Linux since March 23, 2007.
          "It is a capital mistake to theorize before one has data." - Sherlock Holmes

          Comment


            #6
            Re: ext3 filesystem check

            ok, folks...
            i asked on the ext3-users mailing list what is the technical rationale behind periodic fsck.
            i got this very enlighting reply from larry mcvoy:
            disks rot
            gnu/linux is not windoze

            Comment


              #7
              Re: ext3 filesystem check

              You're not checking the filesystem so much as your checking the physical volume the filesystem is on. If you didn't go through the check, and some bits were missing, each additional write could compound the error. By the time you knew you had an issue, every means of recovering any data will have been over-written.
              By checking the filesystem periodically, you can know when it's starting to go, and replace it.

              Comment


                #8
                Re: ext3 filesystem check

                Originally posted by jankushka

                disks rot
                Aha! Just as I always suspected!


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