/dev/sdc should be checked for errors












1















Can anyone help me troubleshoot this? I tried looking online but for some reason not a lot is coming up, as if it's a big secret or something.



Every time I connect to it I see "/dev/sdc should be checked for errors" and below that (not sure if this is related) it says ***** System restart required *****



I did not set this server up but what I do know is /dev/sdc is an iSCSI connection to a RAID volume on a Promise VessRAID 1840i.



Are there ways to test the volume w/out unmounting the filesystem or effecting user's access to the data on it? If so please explain what needs to be done.



Thanks!










share|improve this question























  • askubuntu.com/questions/14928/…

    – Hannu
    Oct 17 '14 at 17:17











  • That sounds like it's coming from fsck so you should probably unmount it and check it out. tune2fs is your friend.

    – ppetraki
    Oct 17 '14 at 18:17
















1















Can anyone help me troubleshoot this? I tried looking online but for some reason not a lot is coming up, as if it's a big secret or something.



Every time I connect to it I see "/dev/sdc should be checked for errors" and below that (not sure if this is related) it says ***** System restart required *****



I did not set this server up but what I do know is /dev/sdc is an iSCSI connection to a RAID volume on a Promise VessRAID 1840i.



Are there ways to test the volume w/out unmounting the filesystem or effecting user's access to the data on it? If so please explain what needs to be done.



Thanks!










share|improve this question























  • askubuntu.com/questions/14928/…

    – Hannu
    Oct 17 '14 at 17:17











  • That sounds like it's coming from fsck so you should probably unmount it and check it out. tune2fs is your friend.

    – ppetraki
    Oct 17 '14 at 18:17














1












1








1








Can anyone help me troubleshoot this? I tried looking online but for some reason not a lot is coming up, as if it's a big secret or something.



Every time I connect to it I see "/dev/sdc should be checked for errors" and below that (not sure if this is related) it says ***** System restart required *****



I did not set this server up but what I do know is /dev/sdc is an iSCSI connection to a RAID volume on a Promise VessRAID 1840i.



Are there ways to test the volume w/out unmounting the filesystem or effecting user's access to the data on it? If so please explain what needs to be done.



Thanks!










share|improve this question














Can anyone help me troubleshoot this? I tried looking online but for some reason not a lot is coming up, as if it's a big secret or something.



Every time I connect to it I see "/dev/sdc should be checked for errors" and below that (not sure if this is related) it says ***** System restart required *****



I did not set this server up but what I do know is /dev/sdc is an iSCSI connection to a RAID volume on a Promise VessRAID 1840i.



Are there ways to test the volume w/out unmounting the filesystem or effecting user's access to the data on it? If so please explain what needs to be done.



Thanks!







fsck






share|improve this question













share|improve this question











share|improve this question




share|improve this question










asked Oct 17 '14 at 16:36









00fruX00fruX

55611128




55611128













  • askubuntu.com/questions/14928/…

    – Hannu
    Oct 17 '14 at 17:17











  • That sounds like it's coming from fsck so you should probably unmount it and check it out. tune2fs is your friend.

    – ppetraki
    Oct 17 '14 at 18:17



















  • askubuntu.com/questions/14928/…

    – Hannu
    Oct 17 '14 at 17:17











  • That sounds like it's coming from fsck so you should probably unmount it and check it out. tune2fs is your friend.

    – ppetraki
    Oct 17 '14 at 18:17

















askubuntu.com/questions/14928/…

– Hannu
Oct 17 '14 at 17:17





askubuntu.com/questions/14928/…

– Hannu
Oct 17 '14 at 17:17













That sounds like it's coming from fsck so you should probably unmount it and check it out. tune2fs is your friend.

– ppetraki
Oct 17 '14 at 18:17





That sounds like it's coming from fsck so you should probably unmount it and check it out. tune2fs is your friend.

– ppetraki
Oct 17 '14 at 18:17










1 Answer
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You'll need to unmount the drive to check the file system for errors. You can't do it while the filesystem is live.




  • Ensure FSCKFIX=yes is present in /etc/default/rcS (it's no by default).

  • Run touch /forcefsck, and reboot the system.

  • Revert your changes to rcS once fsck is complete.






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    1 Answer
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    You'll need to unmount the drive to check the file system for errors. You can't do it while the filesystem is live.




    • Ensure FSCKFIX=yes is present in /etc/default/rcS (it's no by default).

    • Run touch /forcefsck, and reboot the system.

    • Revert your changes to rcS once fsck is complete.






    share|improve this answer




























      0














      You'll need to unmount the drive to check the file system for errors. You can't do it while the filesystem is live.




      • Ensure FSCKFIX=yes is present in /etc/default/rcS (it's no by default).

      • Run touch /forcefsck, and reboot the system.

      • Revert your changes to rcS once fsck is complete.






      share|improve this answer


























        0












        0








        0







        You'll need to unmount the drive to check the file system for errors. You can't do it while the filesystem is live.




        • Ensure FSCKFIX=yes is present in /etc/default/rcS (it's no by default).

        • Run touch /forcefsck, and reboot the system.

        • Revert your changes to rcS once fsck is complete.






        share|improve this answer













        You'll need to unmount the drive to check the file system for errors. You can't do it while the filesystem is live.




        • Ensure FSCKFIX=yes is present in /etc/default/rcS (it's no by default).

        • Run touch /forcefsck, and reboot the system.

        • Revert your changes to rcS once fsck is complete.







        share|improve this answer












        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer










        answered Jul 17 '15 at 0:43









        BoinstBoinst

        1213




        1213






























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