Terry Lambert wrote:
Kris Kennaway wrote:

On Mon, Nov 25, 2002 at 10:24:46AM -0500, Robert Watson wrote:

I thought, this might be due to the priority of the background fsck and
have once left it alone for several hours -- with no effect. The usual
fsck takes a few minutes.

We really need to disable background fsck if the system panicked.
I've seen far too much bizarre filesystem behaviour that went away the
next time I did a full fsck.

I don't think this is really possible.

I went looking for a generic "application use" CMOS are for this
sort of thing a while back, and I was unable to find one.

Well you should please take a look at the "fast boot" option
of moderately modern BIOS-es. Somthing along those lines went right now
in to the linux kernel. Seems pretty adequate to me, since you would
be even able to controll it through the BIOS setup...


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