Your message dated Wed, 03 May 2006 09:32:54 +0100
with message-id <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
and subject line Bug#365729: mount fails on unmountable filesystem despite
'noauto'
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--- Begin Message ---
Package: mount
Version: 2.12r-8
Severity: serious
I have an LVM2 partition on a machine that dual-boots into 2.4 and 2.6
(to use certain ISDN drivers). Hence this partition is unusable under
2.4 kernels; I have the following /etc/fstab entry:
/dev/srv_vg/lvol0 /srv/public ext3 noauto 0 2
This should cause mount not to attempt to mount it on boot, leaving the
user (root) free to mount. Unfortunately, it does not, and I have to
^D past this failure on boot. This means my machine cannot autoboot
after power-failures, etc.
-- System Information:
Debian Release: testing/unstable
APT prefers experimental
APT policy: (990, 'experimental'), (500, 'unstable')
Architecture: i386 (i686)
Shell: /bin/sh linked to /bin/bash
Kernel: Linux 2.4.26-1-386
Locale: LANG=en_GB.UTF-8, LC_CTYPE=en_GB.UTF-8 (charmap=UTF-8) (ignored: LC_ALL
set to ga_IE.UTF-8)
Versions of packages mount depends on:
ii libblkid1 1.38+1.39-WIP-2005.12.31-1 block device id library
ii libc6 2.3.6-3 GNU C Library: Shared libraries an
ii libuuid1 1.38+1.39-WIP-2005.12.31-1 universally unique id library
mount recommends no packages.
-- no debconf information
--- End Message ---
--- Begin Message ---
Yes, it was actually fsck and not mount.
Sorry about that, closing the bug.
Regards
Alastair
Mike Dornberger wrote:
Hi,
On Tue, May 02, 2006 at 01:03:40PM +0100, Alastair McKinstry wrote:
/dev/srv_vg/lvol0 /srv/public ext3 noauto 0 2
This should cause mount not to attempt to mount it on boot, leaving the
user (root) free to mount. Unfortunately, it does not, and I have to
are you sure it is mount that causes this error and not fsck? Try setting
the sixth field to 0 (see man fstab).
Greetings,
Mike Dornberger
--- End Message ---