Why are you running fsck ? Did the system ask you to do so or were you just 
experimenting ? You may want to umount that partition and then run fsck on it. 
This should sort your busy errors. If you are coming from the Windows world this 
isn't the same as a defrag or anything like that. You may have to run fsck if 
you shutdown rudely or have a power failure.

If you are running 7.3 then use the ext3 file system and the journals will be 
used to rebuild the FS but in some cases it will ask you to run an fsck at boot 
time. There is also an update of the mount pkg on the up2date system you may 
want to update to that.

        Cheers,

        Aly.


-- 
Aly Dharshi
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
System Administrator ORS Servers

        "A good speech is like a good dress
        that's short enough to be interesting
        and long enough to cover the subject"



_______________________________________________
Redhat-list mailing list
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
https://listman.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/redhat-list

Reply via email to