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NAME
| | fsck - check and repair file systems |
SYNOPSIS
| | fsck [-F FSType] [-m] [-V] [special ...] |
| | fsck [-F FSType] [ -n | N | y | Y] [-V] [-o FSType-specific-options] [special ...] |
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fsck audits and interactively repairs inconsistent
file system conditions. If the file system is inconsistent the default action
for each correction is to wait for the user to respond yes
or no. If the user does not have write permission fsck defaults to a no action. Some corrective
actions will result in loss of data. The amount and severity of data loss
can be determined from the diagnostic output.
FSType-specific-options are options specified
in a comma-separated (with no intervening spaces) list of options or keyword-attribute
pairs for interpretation by the FSType-specific
module of the command.
special represents the character special
device on which the file system resides, for example, /dev/rdsk/c1t0d0s7. Note: the character special device, not the block special device,
should be used. fsck will not work on a block device if
it is mounted.
If no special device is specified fsck checks the file systems listed in /etc/vfstab.
Those entries in /etc/vfstab which have a character special
device entry in the fsckdev field and have a non-zero numeric
entry in the fsckpass field will be checked. Specifying -F FSType limits the file systems to be
checked to those of the type indicated.
If special is specified, but -F
is not, the file system type will be determined by looking for a matching
entry in /etc/vfstab. If no entry is found, the default
local file system type specified in /etc/default/fs will
be used.
If a file system type supports parallel checking, for example, ufs, some file systems eligible for checking may be checked in parallel.
Consult the file system-specific man page (for example, fsck_ufs(1M))
for more information.
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The following generic options are supported:
- -F FSType
- Specify the file system type on which to operate.
- -m
- Check but do
not repair. This option checks that the file system is suitable for mounting,
returning the appropriate exit status. If the file system is ready for mounting, fsck displays a message such as:
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ufs fsck: sanity check: /dev/rdsk/c0t3d0s1 okay
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- -n | -N
- Assume a no response to all questions asked by fsck; do not open the file system for writing.
- -V
- Echo the expanded
command line but do not execute the command. This option may be used to verify
and to validate the command line.
- -y | Y
- Assume a yes response to all questions asked by fsck.
- -o specific-options
- These specific-options can be any
combination of the following separated by commas (with no intervening spaces).
-
b=n
- Use block n as the super block
for the file system. Block 32 is always one of the alternate super blocks.
Determine the location of other super blocks by running newfs(1M)
with the -Nv options specified.
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c
- If the file
system is in the old (static table) format, convert it to the new (dynamic
table) format. If the file system is in the new format, convert it to the
old format provided the old format can support the file system configuration.
In interactive mode, fsck will list the direction the conversion
is to be made and ask whether the conversion should be done. If a negative
answer is given, no further operations are done on the file system. In preen
mode, the direction of the conversion is listed and done if possible without
user interaction. Conversion in preen mode is best used when all the file
systems are being converted at once. The format of a file system can be determined
from the first line of output from fstyp(1M).
Note: the c option is seldom used and is included only
for compatibility with pre-4.1 releases. There is no guarantee that this option
will be included in future releases.
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f
- Force checking
of file systems regardless of the state of their super block clean flag.
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p
- Check and fix
the file system non-interactively ("preen"). Exit immediately
if there is a problem requiring intervention. This option is required to enable
parallel file system checking.
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w
- Check writable
file systems only.
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0
- file system is okay and does not need checking
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1
- erroneous
parameters are specified
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32
- file
system is unmounted and needs checking (fsck -m only)
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33
- file
system is already mounted
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34
- cannot
stat device
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36
- uncorrectable
errors detected - terminate normally
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37
- a
signal was caught during processing
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39
- uncorrectable
errors detected - terminate immediately
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40
- for
root, same as 0.
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See largefile(5)
for the description of the behavior of fsck when encountering
files greater than or equal to 2 Gbyte (231 bytes).
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/etc/default/fs
- default local file system type. Default values can be set for the following
flags in /etc/default/fs. For example: LOCAL=ufs.
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LOCAL
- The default partition for a command if no FSType is specified.
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/etc/vfstab
- list of default parameters for each file system
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See attributes(5)
for descriptions of the following attributes:
| ATTRIBUTE TYPE | ATTRIBUTE VALUE |
| Availability | SUNWcsu |
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clri(1M), fsck_cachefs(1M), fsck_ufs(1M), fsdb_ufs(1M), fsirand(1M), fstyp(1M), mkfs(1M), mkfs_ufs(1M), mountall(1M), newfs(1M), reboot( 1M), vfstab(4), attributes(5), largefile(5), ufs(7FS)
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The operating system buffers file system data. Running fsck on a mounted file system can cause the operating system's buffers
to become out of date with respect to the disk. For this reason, the file
system should be unmounted when fsck
is used. If this is not possible, care should be taken that the system is
quiescent and that it is rebooted immediately after fsck
is run. Quite often, however, this will not be sufficient. A panic will probably
occur if running fsck on a file system modifies the file
system.
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This command may not be supported for all FSTypes.
Running fsck on file systems larger than 2 Gb fails
if the user chooses to use the block interface to the device:
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fsck /dev/dsk/c?t?d?s?
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rather than the raw (character special) device:
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fsck /dev/rdsk/c?t?d?s?
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Starting with Solaris 9, fsck manages
extended attribute data on the disk. (See fsattr(5)
for a description of extended file attributes.) A file system with extended
attributes can be mounted on versions of Solaris that are not attribute-aware
(versions prior to Solaris 9), but the attributes will not be accessible and fsck will strip them from the files and place them in lost+found. Once the attributes have been stripped, the file system
is completely stable on versions of Solaris that are attribute-aware, but
would be considered corrupted on attribute-aware versions. In the latter circumstance,
run the attribute-aware fsck to stabilize the file system
before using it in an attribute-aware environment.
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Copyright 2003 Sun Microsystems, Inc. All rights reserved.
Use is subject to license terms.
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