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I've run into a situation twice now and was wondering if there was a remedy other than the one I've been doing.
What happens is I put a mount entry into fstab which seems to be ok when I initialize it with the mount -a command from a shell prompt.
However during boot, it seems to choke on this same entry and drops me into emergency mode.
I then have to edit fstab, remming out the offending line and rebooting.
My question is, I know I can press tab during my initial boot to set additional kernel parameters with my bootloader (syslinux), but is there a way to modify fstab in a similar manner?
Also, if not, during boot I have to wait 1:30 as it tries to mount the partition before it stops trying , is there way to cancel out of this wait period or adjust it?
Thanks!
Last edited by proof (2015-06-03 00:54:28)
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Post the offending fstab.
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UUID=abbbc690-5502-48bd-8645-9c7ab1001f9f / ext4 rw,relatime,data=ordered 0 1
UUID=c3884a8f-d8d4-478a-91b0-97eef248b33a /vbox ext4 rw,relatime,data=ordered 0 1
PARTUUID=cc782cb5-02 /windows ntfs rw,relatime,data=ordered 0 1
It's the third line that it's choking on.
Last edited by proof (2015-06-03 01:18:48)
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Should the pass value be 2 on the non root lines?
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You can't fsck an NTFS filesystem: https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/NT … onfiguring
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You can't fsck an NTFS filesystem: https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/NT … onfiguring
I'll give that a shot in the morning. Don't want to reboot remotely. Thanks!
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The above sounds like the right fix for this problem, but more generally for what you asked about, see here:
https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/Fs … th_systemd
"UNIX is simple and coherent..." - Dennis Ritchie, "GNU's Not UNIX" - Richard Stallman
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