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Operating Systems Linux Fedora SD's, fsck, dmesg, freezing, and the Corrupt FAT-fs Post 302992030 by Beta_OmegaAdinf on Monday 20th of February 2017 06:44:23 PM
Old 02-20-2017
Bug

Sorry I forgot to mention that I already followed the steps above. When I ran fsck /dev/mmcblk0p1 It worked and supposedly fixed my SD card, removing 11 dirty bits, but when I unmounted and put it back in, again, the entire screen froze. Mouse functionality? Gone. Keyboard functionality? No sir, I'm afraid that went out the window too. The only thing that seems to work while it's trying to mount is the power button.
Running dmesg the corrupt file system error/warning no longer shows up. Could it be a result of the update or enabling rpm-fusion?

EDIT: Thank you for suggesting a back up. I cp'd * from the card onto the computer before running fsck, after running fsck -p, removing dirty bits, and waiting for the card to load, I saw that file3.brs was missing. Thank god it was saved to the computer.

---------- Post updated at 06:44 PM ---------- Previous update was at 06:00 PM ----------

@drysdalk


Code:
mmc0: card never left busy state
mmc0: error -110 whilst initializing MMC card
mmc0:: error -110 whilst initializing SD card

Someone on StackOverflow is having a similar problem on Ubuntu which of course they very nicely reported and closed ( Seems to happen to all StackOverflow questions ) Turns out it was a bug in the kernel that was causing the SD card to freeze the computer/Not read/mount right the first time. I'm going to see if anyone has reported such a bug for fedora yet.

Last edited by Beta_OmegaAdinf; 02-20-2017 at 07:11 PM.. Reason: Courtesy reasons.
 

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fsck.gfs2(8)						      System Manager's Manual						      fsck.gfs2(8)

NAME
fsck.gfs2 - Offline GFS and GFS2 file system checker SYNOPSIS
fsck.gfs2 [OPTION]... DEVICE WARNING
All computers must have the filesystem unmounted before running fsck.gfs2. Failure to unmount from all nodes in a cluster will likely result in filesystem corruption. DESCRIPTION
fsck.gfs2 will check that the GFS or GFS2 file system on a device is structurally valid. It should not be run on a mounted file system. If file system corruption is detected, it will attempt to repair the file system. There is a limit to what fsck.gfs2 can do. If important file system structures are destroyed, such that the checker cannot determine what the repairs should be, reparations could fail. GFS2 is a journaled file system, and as such should be able to repair damage to the file system on its own. However, faulty hardware has the ability to write incomplete blocks to a file system thereby causing corruption that GFS2 cannot fix. The first step to ensuring a healthy file system is the selection of reliable hardware (i.e. storage systems that will write complete blocks - even in the event of power failure). Note: Most file system checkers will not check the file system if it is "clean" (i.e. unmounted since the last use). The fsck.gfs program behaves differently because the storage may be shared among several nodes in a cluster, and therefore problems may have been introduced on a different computer. Therefore, fsck.gfs2 will always check the file system unless the -p (preen) option is used, in which case it fol- lows special rules (see below). OPTIONS
-a Same as the -p (preen) option. -f Force checking even if the file system seems clean. -h Help. This prints out the proper command line usage syntax. -q Quiet. -n No to all questions. By specifying this option, fsck.gfs2 will only show the changes that would be made, but not make any changes to the filesystem. -p Preen (same as -a: automatically repair the file system if it is dirty, and safe to do so, otherwise exit.) Note: If the file system has locking protocol lock_nolock, the file system is considered a non-shared storage device and the fsck is deemed safe. However, fsck.gfs2 does not know whether it was called automatically from the init process, due to options in the /etc/fstab file. Therefore, if the locking protocol is lock_dlm and -a or -p was specified, fsck.gfs2 cannot determine whether the disk is mounted by other nodes in the cluster. Therefore, the fsck is deemed to be unsafe and a warning is given if any damage or dirty journals are found. In that case, the file system should be unmounted from all nodes in the cluster and fsck.gfs2 should be run manually without the -a or -p options. -V Version. Print out the program version information. -v Verbose operation. Print more information while running. -y Yes to all questions. By specifying this option, fsck.gfs2 will not prompt before making changes. fsck.gfs2(8)
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