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Operating Systems Linux Red Hat Boot Messages changed after mondorestore Post 302336847 by shamik on Thursday 23rd of July 2009 02:10:58 AM
Old 07-23-2009
Question

Yes, i totally agree with what is said.

The problem is all the services get started as usual, but i dont see any messages like which services got started and which failed to start.

After observing boot log I came to know that the messages-
"EXT3-fs: write access will be enabled during recovery.
kjournald starting. Commit interval 5
EXT3-fs: recovery complete.
EXT3-fs: mounted filesystem with ordered data mode.
"

also come in normal unimaged system, and since they are very quick, we just cant read those. After the last message shown above, another message comes saying-
"switching to new root"

and thereafter the desired messages-

*** Welcome to Red Hat Linux Enterprise ***

Starting cups ..... [OK]
Starting NFS ...... [OK]
Starting *** ..... [OK]
Starting eth0 [OK]
....etc


start coming up.

But in the problem case described here, after image restore, the system doesnt show these messages. It stops for sometime at-
"EXT3-fs: mounted filesystem with ordered data mode."

and then normal login prompt appears.

How can I get those messages to appear again as before ?
 

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fsck.jfs(8)						  JFS utility - file system check					       fsck.jfs(8)

NAME
fsck.jfs - initiate replay of the JFS transaction log, and check and repair a JFS formatted device SYNOPSIS
fsck.jfs [ -afnopvV ] device DESCRIPTION
fsck.jfs is used to replay the JFS transaction log, check a JFS formatted device for errors, and fix any errors found. device is the special file name corresponding to the actual device to be checked (e.g. /dev/hdb1). fsck.jfs must be run as root. WARNING
fsck.jfs should only be used to check an unmounted file system or a file system that is mounted READ ONLY. Using fsck.jfs to check a file system mounted other than READ ONLY could seriously damage the file system! OPTIONS
If no options are selected, the default is -p. -a Autocheck mode - Replay the transaction log. Do not continue fsck processing unless the aggregate state is dirty or the log replay failed. Functionally equivalent to -p. Autocheck mode is typically the default mode used when fsck.jfs is called at boot time. -f Replay the transaction log and force checking even if the file system appears clean. Repair all problems automatically. -n Open the file system read only. Do not replay the transaction log. Report errors, but do not repair them. -o Omit the replay of the transaction log. This option should not be used unless as a last resort (i.e. the log has been severely corrupted and replaying it causes further problems). -p Automatically repair ("preen") the file system. Replay the transaction log. Do not continue fsck processing unless the aggregate state is dirty or the log replay failed. Functionally equivalent to -a. -v Verbose messaging - print details and debug statements to stdout. -V Print version information and exit (regardless of any other chosen options). EXAMPLES
Check the 3rd partition on the 2nd hard disk, print extended information to stdout, replay the transaction log, force complete fsck.jfs checking, and give permission to repair all errors: fsck.jfs -v -f /dev/hdb3 Check the 5th partition on the 1st hard disk, and report, but do not repair, any errors: fsck.jfs -n /dev/hda5 EXIT CODE
The exit code returned by fsck.jfs represents one of the following conditions: 0 No errors 1 File system errors corrected and/or transaction log replayed successfully 2 File system errors corrected, system should be rebooted if file system was mounted 4 File system errors left uncorrected 8 Operational error 16 Usage or syntax error 128 Shared library error REPORTING BUGS
If you find a bug in JFS or fsck.jfs, please report it via the bug tracking system ("Report Bugs" section) of the JFS project web site: http://oss.software.ibm.com/jfs Please send as much pertinent information as possible, including the complete output of running fsck.jfs with the -v option on the JFS device. SEE ALSO
fsck(8), mkfs.jfs(8), logdump(8), logredo(8), xchklog(8), xchkdmp(8), xpeek(8) AUTHORS
Barry Arndt (barndt@us.ibm.com) William Braswell, Jr. fsck.jfs is maintained by IBM. See the JFS project web site for more details: http://oss.software.ibm.com/jfs March 1, 2002 fsck.jfs(8)
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