fsck

From ArchWiki

fsck stands for "file system check" and it is used to check and optionally repair one or more Linux file systems. Normally, the fsck program will try to handle file systems on different physical disk drives in parallel to reduce the total amount of time needed to check all of the file systems (see fsck(8)).

The Arch Linux boot process conveniently takes care of the fsck procedure for you and will check all relevant partitions on your drive(s) automatically on every boot. Hence, there is usually no need to resort to the command-line.

Boot time checking

Mechanism

There are two players involved:

  1. mkinitcpio offers you the option to fsck your root file system before mounting it via the fsck hook. If you do this, you should mount root read-write via the appropriate rw kernel parameter.[1]
  2. systemd will fsck all file systems having a fsck pass number greater than 0 (either with #fstab options or a user-supplied unit file). For the root file system, it also has to be mounted read-only initially with the kernel parameter ro and only then remounted read-write from fstab (note that the defaults mount option implies rw).

The first option is the recommended default, and what you will end up with if you follow the Installation guide. If you want to go with option 2 instead, you should remove the fsck hook from mkinitcpio.conf and use ro on the kernel command-line. The kernel parameter fsck.mode=skip can be used to make sure fsck is disabled entirely for both options.

Forcing the check

If you use the base mkinitcpio hook, you can force fsck at boot time by passing fsck.mode=force as a kernel parameter. This will check every file system you have on the machine.

Alternatively, systemd provides [email protected](8), which checks all configured file systems, which were not checked in the initramfs. However, checking the root file system this way causes a delay in the boot process, because the file system has to be remounted.

Tango-view-fullscreen.pngThis article or section needs expansion.Tango-view-fullscreen.png

Reason: Is it possible to run fsck from initramfs using the systemd hook? (Discuss in Talk:Fsck)
Note: For those accustomed to use other GNU/Linux distributions, the old tricks consisting in writing a file with the name forcefsck to the root of each file system or using the command shutdown with the -F flag were only working for the old SysVinit and early versions of Upstart and are not working with systemd. The aforementioned solution is thus the only one working for Arch Linux.

Tips and tricks

Attempt to repair damaged blocks

To automatically repair damaged portions of an ext2/ext3/ext4 or FAT file system, run:

Warning: This will not ask if you want to repair it, as the answer is Yes when you run it.
# fsck -a

Repair damaged blocks interactively

This is useful for when files on the boot partition have changed, and the journal failed to properly update. In this case, unmount the boot partition, and run the following code to repair damaged portions:

# fsck -r drive

Changing the check frequency

Note: The following commands tune2fs and dumpe2fs work only with ext2/ext3/ext4 file systems.

By default, fsck checks a file system every 30 boots (counted individually for each partition). To change the frequency of checking, run:

# tune2fs -c 20 /dev/sda1

In this example, 20 is the number of boots between two checks.

Note that 1 would make it scan at every boot, while 0 would stop scanning altogether.

If you wish to see the frequency number and the current mount count for a specific partition, use:

# dumpe2fs -h /dev/sda1 | grep -i 'mount count'

fstab options

fstab is a system configuration file and is used to tell the Linux kernel which partitions (file systems) to mount and where on the file system tree.

A typical /etc/fstab entry may look like this:

/dev/sda1   /         ext4      defaults       0  1
/dev/sda2   /other    ext4      defaults       0  2
/dev/sda3   /win      ntfs-3g   defaults       0  0

The 6th column (in bold) is the fsck option.

  • 0 — do not check.
  • 1 — first file system (partition) to check; / (root partition) should be set to 1.
  • 2 — all other file systems to be checked.

Troubleshooting

Can't run fsck on a separate /usr partition

  1. Make sure you have the required hooks in /etc/mkinitcpio.conf and that you remembered to re-generate your initramfs image after editing this file.
  2. Check your fstab! Only the root partition needs 1 at the end, everything else should have either 2 or 0. Carefully inspect it for other typos, as well.

ext2fs: no external journal

There are times (due to power failure) in which an ext(3/4) file system can corrupt beyond normal repair. Normally, there will be a prompt from fsck indicating that it cannot find an external journal. In this case, run the following commands:

Unmount the partition based on its directory

# umount directory

Write a new journal to the partition

# tune2fs -j /dev/partition

Run an fsck to repair the partition

# fsck -p /dev/partition