[CentOS] How to stagger fsck executions
Hugh E Cruickshank
hugh at forsoft.com
Tue Apr 21 19:13:12 UTC 2015
From: Gordon Messmer Sent: April 21, 2015 10:30
>
> On 04/21/2015 09:40 AM, Hugh E Cruickshank wrote:
> > I accept that fscks are required on a periodic basis and I
> am willing
> > to reboot more often to achieve these but I would like to minimize
> > downtime (during the reboot) where possible.
>
> Why do you accept that?
Every article I have read on the subject has recommended this a good
practice.
> The default behavior for filesystems set up by Red Hat tools
> (anaconda) is not to fsck. Not by mount count, nor by
> time. The default behavior for e2fsprogs was changed to disable
> periodic fsck in Feb 2011. CentOS 6 includes a version of e2fsprogs
> from before that change, but the filesystem is considered
> very stable,
> and the periodic fsck is not generally considered necessary.
I have confirmed that filesystems setup by anaconda on both CentOS 6
and RHEL 6 have both boot count and interval disabled however they
are not disabled for any manually created filesystems (they are set
to 24 and 6 months, respectively).
I find it interesting that as late as 2014 Red Hat is recommending:
. If automatic filesystem checks are inconvenient, then it is
recommended to disable the automated filesystem check as discussed
in the following article:
How to turn off forced/automatic fsck in Red Hat Enterprise Linux?
. Once disabled, it is recommended to schedule regular "human
controlled/monitored" filsystem checks, when it is convenient to
do so. These checks should not be ignored, or scheduled too far
apart.
This is from https://access.redhat.com/solutions/70531
Regards, Hugh
--
Hugh E Cruickshank, Forward Software, www.forward-software.com
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