Hi all,
I issued the commands on a single disk system: with two partitions / is linux sda1 and /home is sda3 yum -y update yum -y install e4fsprogs reboot umount /home tune2fs -O extents,uninit_bg,dir_index /dev/sda3 e2fsck -yfDC0 /dev/sda3
That worked just fine. I then had a different system that is software raid. where / is linux and md0 and /home is md1 yum -y update yum -y install e4fsprogs reboot umount /home tune2fs -O extents,uninit_bg,dir_index /dev/md1 at this point I get an error that invalid options for tune2fs
Why is that and what to do next... The single disk sda3 worked fine. shouldnt the md1 work also.
Thanks,
Jerry
On Wed, Jan 22, 2014 at 11:40 AM, Jerry Geis geisj@pagestation.com wrote:
Hi all,
I issued the commands on a single disk system: with two partitions / is linux sda1 and /home is sda3 yum -y update yum -y install e4fsprogs reboot umount /home tune2fs -O extents,uninit_bg,dir_index /dev/sda3 e2fsck -yfDC0 /dev/sda3
That worked just fine. I then had a different system that is software raid. where / is linux and md0 and /home is md1 yum -y update yum -y install e4fsprogs reboot umount /home tune2fs -O extents,uninit_bg,dir_index /dev/md1 at this point I get an error that invalid options for tune2fs
What features are currently turned on on /dev/md1? Maybe there's a necessary feature that you're missing.
Make sure you have backups or use an expendable VM so you don't trash a production box. :-|
Why is that and what to do next... The single disk sda3 worked fine. shouldnt the md1 work also.
Thanks,
Jerry _______________________________________________ CentOS mailing list CentOS@centos.org http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos
FYI:
On CentOS 5 ext4 support was added later on. It's called tune4fs. tune4fs supports ext4 whereas tune2fs doesn't.
BR