On Fri, Jan 23, 2009 at 6:09 PM, Markus Heuser wrote:
> Hey Denis,
>
>> There is no information of bugreport or feature request about it, so
>> should it be sane to open a feature request to remove this behaviour?
>
> Well, that depends on whether the devs think it's "working as intended".
> Perso
Hey Denis,
> There is no information of bugreport or feature request about it, so
> should it be sane to open a feature request to remove this behaviour?
Well, that depends on whether the devs think it's "working as intended".
Personally, I don't think that suppressing the progress bar does much
Markus Heuser wrote:
> Hi,
>
> are you using the "quiet" parameter in GRUBs "kernel" line?
> This is what caused fsck to be silent in my case.
>
> The problem is that I don't wan't the extremely verbose kerneloutputs when
> not
> using "quiet". Besides, it also slows down booting since writing
On Fri, Jan 23, 2009 at 2:35 PM, Markus Heuser wrote:
> Hi,
>
> are you using the "quiet" parameter in GRUBs "kernel" line?
> This is what caused fsck to be silent in my case.
>
> The problem is that I don't wan't the extremely verbose kerneloutputs when not
> using "quiet". Besides, it also slows
Hi,
are you using the "quiet" parameter in GRUBs "kernel" line?
This is what caused fsck to be silent in my case.
The problem is that I don't wan't the extremely verbose kerneloutputs when not
using "quiet". Besides, it also slows down booting since writing so much text
into framebuffer isn't f
just comment out lines 247, 248, 249 and 251 in /etc/rc.sysinit (line
numbers in default config, of course) and you'll see the progress bars
even with 'quiet'.
On Fri, Jan 23, 2009 at 2:24 PM, Ashish SHUKLA wrote:
> Jeff Mickey writes:
>> On Fri, Jan 23, 2009 at 10:45, Ashish SHUKLA wrote:
>>> I'm also using ext3 and I'm talking about the file-system check which
>>> takes after every n days or n mounts during boot-up. It is not showing
>>> any status of
you won't see the progress if you have 'quiet' in as kernel argument
(see your boot loader config). to display the progress while quieting
everything else, edit your /etc/rc.sysinit (Jeff Mickey posted the code
part already).
Jeff Mickey writes:
> On Fri, Jan 23, 2009 at 10:45, Ashish SHUKLA wrote:
>> I'm also using ext3 and I'm talking about the file-system check which
>> takes after every n days or n mounts during boot-up. It is not showing
>> any status of file-system check. Are you getting any progress-bar during
>
On Fri, Jan 23, 2009 at 10:45, Ashish SHUKLA wrote:
> I'm also using ext3 and I'm talking about the file-system check which
> takes after every n days or n mounts during boot-up. It is not showing
> any status of file-system check. Are you getting any progress-bar during
> the file-system check ?
Charly Ghislain writes:
> On Friday 23 January 2009 16:12:26 Ashish SHUKLA wrote:
>> Is there any switch for fsck (during startup) to be somewhat verbose
>> like displaying the progress of filesystem check ?
> It does for me, without changing anything... Im using ext3
I'm also using ext3 and I'm
It is silent for me too, I'd like to know how to put it verbose.
2009/1/23 Charly Ghislain
> On Friday 23 January 2009 16:12:26 Ashish SHUKLA wrote:
> > Is there any switch for fsck (during startup) to be somewhat verbose
> > like displaying the progress of filesystem check ?
>
> It does for me,
On Friday 23 January 2009 16:12:26 Ashish SHUKLA wrote:
> Is there any switch for fsck (during startup) to be somewhat verbose
> like displaying the progress of filesystem check ?
It does for me, without changing anything... Im using ext3
Hi all,
Is there any switch for fsck (during startup) to be somewhat verbose
like displaying the progress of filesystem check ?
TiA
--
Ashish SHUKLA
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