| .\" -*- nroff -*- |
| .\" Copyright 1993, 1994, 1995 by Theodore Ts'o. All Rights Reserved. |
| .\" This file may be copied under the terms of the GNU Public License. |
| .\" |
| .TH FSCK 8 "@E2FSPROGS_MONTH@ @E2FSPROGS_YEAR@" "E2fsprogs version @E2FSPROGS_VERSION@" |
| .SH NAME |
| fsck \- check and repair a Linux file system |
| .SH SYNOPSIS |
| .B fsck |
| [ |
| .B \-AVRTNP |
| ] |
| [ |
| .B \-s |
| ] |
| [ |
| .B \-t |
| .I fstype |
| ] |
| [ |
| .B fs-options |
| ] |
| .I filesys [ ... ] |
| .SH DESCRIPTION |
| .B fsck |
| is used to check and optionally repair a Linux file system. |
| .I filesys |
| is either the device name (e.g. /dev/hda1, /dev/sdb2) or the mount point |
| (e.g. /, /usr, /home) for the file system. If this invocation of |
| .B fsck |
| has several filesystems on different physical disk drives to check, then |
| .B fsck |
| will try to run them in parallel. This reduces the total amount time it |
| takes to check all of the filesystems, since |
| .B fsck |
| takes advantage of the parallelism of multiple disk spindles. |
| .PP |
| The exit code returned by |
| .B fsck |
| is the sum of the following conditions: |
| .br |
| \ 0\ \-\ No errors |
| .br |
| \ 1\ \-\ File system errors corrected |
| .br |
| \ 2\ \-\ System should be rebooted |
| .br |
| \ 4\ \-\ File system errors left uncorrected |
| .br |
| \ 8\ \-\ Operational error |
| .br |
| \ 16\ \-\ Usage or syntax error |
| .br |
| \ 128\ \-\ Shared library error |
| .br |
| The exit code returned when all file systems are checked using the |
| .B -A |
| option is the bit-wise OR of the exit codes for each |
| file system that is checked. |
| .PP |
| In actuality, |
| .B fsck |
| is simply a front-end for the various file system checkers |
| (\fBfsck\fR.\fIfstype\fR) available under Linux. The file |
| system-specific checker is searched for in /sbin first, then in /etc/fs |
| and /etc, and finally in the directories listed in the PATH environment |
| variable. Please see the file system-specific checker manual pages for |
| further details. |
| .SH OPTIONS |
| .TP |
| .B -A |
| Walk through the |
| .I /etc/fstab |
| file and try to check all file systems in one run. This option is |
| typically used from the |
| .I /etc/rc |
| system initalization file, instead of multiple commands for checking |
| a single file system. |
| .TP |
| .B -R |
| When checking all file systems with the |
| .B \-A |
| flag, skip the root file system (in case it's already mounted read-write). |
| .TP |
| .B -T |
| Don't show the title on startup. |
| .TP |
| .B -N |
| Don't execute, just show what would be done. |
| .TP |
| .B -P |
| When the |
| .B -A |
| flag is set, check the root filesystem in parallel with the other filesystems. |
| This is not the safest thing in the world to do, |
| since if the root filesystem is in doubt things like the |
| .BR e2fsck (8) |
| executable might be corrupted! This option is mainly provided |
| for those sysadmins who don't want to repartition the root |
| filesystem to be small and compact (which is really the right solution). |
| .TP |
| .B -s |
| Serialize |
| .B fsck |
| operations. This is a good idea if you checking multiple |
| filesystems and the checkers are in an interactive mode. (Note: |
| .BR e2fsck (8) |
| runs in an interactive mode by default. To make |
| .BR e2fsck (8) |
| run in a non-interactive mode, you must either specify the |
| .B -p |
| or |
| .B -a |
| option, if you wish for errors to be corrected automatically, or |
| the |
| .B -n |
| option if you do not.) |
| .TP |
| .B -V |
| Produce verbose output, including all file system-specific commands |
| that are executed. |
| .TP |
| .BI -t \ fstype |
| Specifies the type of file system to be checked. When the |
| .B \-A |
| flag is specified, only filesystems that match |
| .I fstype |
| are checked. If |
| .I fstype |
| is prefixed with |
| .B no |
| then only filesystems whose type does not match |
| .I fstype |
| are checked. |
| .sp |
| Normally, the filesystem type is deduced by searching for |
| .I filesys |
| in the |
| .I /etc/fstab |
| file and using the corresponding entry. |
| If the type can not be deduced, |
| .B fsck |
| will use the type specified by the |
| .B \-t |
| option if it specifies a unique filesystem type. If this type is not |
| available, then the default file system type (currently ext2) is used. |
| .TP |
| .B fs-options |
| Any options which are not understood by |
| .BR fsck , |
| or which follow the |
| .B -- |
| option are treated as file system-specific options to be passed to the |
| file system-specific checker. |
| .PP |
| Currently, standardized file system-specific options are somewhat in |
| flux. Although not guaranteed, the following options are supported |
| by most file system checkers: |
| .TP |
| .B -a |
| Automatically repair the file system without any questions (use |
| this option with caution). Note that |
| .BR e2fsck (8) |
| supports |
| .B -a |
| for backwards compatibility only. This option is mapped to |
| .BR e2fsck 's |
| .B -p |
| option which is safe to use, unlike the |
| .B -a |
| option that most file system checkers support. |
| .TP |
| .B -r |
| Interactively repair the filesystem (ask for confirmations). Note: It |
| is generally a bad idea to use this option if multiple fsck's are being |
| run in parallel. Also note that this is |
| .BR e2fsck 's |
| default behavior; it supports this option for backwards compatibility |
| reasons only. |
| .SH AUTHOR |
| Theodore Ts'o (tytso@mit.edu) |
| .PP |
| The manual page was shamelessly adapted from David Engel and Fred van |
| Kempen's generic |
| .B fsck |
| front end program, which was in turn shamelessly |
| adapted from Remy Card's version for the ext2 file system. |
| .SH FILES |
| .IR /etc/fstab . |
| .SH SEE ALSO |
| .BR fstab (5), |
| .BR mkfs (8), |
| .BR fsck.minix (8), |
| .BR fsck.ext2 (8) |
| or |
| .BR e2fsck (8), |
| .BR fsck.xiafs (8). |