- How to repair a file system corruption?
- 3 Answers 3
- Method #1: Using /forcefsck
- Method #2: Using shutdown
- Method #3: Using tune2fs
- Additional notes
- References
- How to Use ‘fsck’ to Repair Linux File System Errors
- When to Use fsck Command in Linux
- fsck Command Options
- Run fsck Command to Repair Linux File System Errors
- Understanding fsck Exit Codes
- Fsck Repair Linux Filesystem
- How to Run fsck on Linux Root Partition
- Force fsck Upon System Boot
- Run fsck in Rescue Mode
- Related Posts
- 37 thoughts on “How to Use ‘fsck’ to Repair Linux File System Errors”
How to repair a file system corruption?
The system boots and works normally. Is it possible to repair this fully, and what is the proper way?
If this happens after a brutal shutdown, no worries, it s probably tmp files. If it happened during use, then you should first backup everything important (on 2 separate supports, in case one fails)
3 Answers 3
You can instruct the filesystem to perform an immediate fsck upon being mounted like so:
Method #1: Using /forcefsck
You can usually schedule a check at the next reboot like so:
$ sudo touch /forcefsck $ sudo reboot
Method #2: Using shutdown
You can also tell the shutdown command to do so as well, via the -F switch:
NOTE: The first method is the most universal way to achieve this!
Method #3: Using tune2fs
You can also make use of tune2fs , which can set the parameters on the filesystem itself to force a check the next time a mount is attempted.
$ sudo tune2fs -l /dev/sda1 Mount count: 3 Maximum mount count: 25
So you have to place the «Mount count» higher than 25 with the following command:
$ sudo tune2fs -C 26 /dev/sda1
Check the value changed with tune2fs -l and then reboot!
NOTE: Of the 3 options I’d use tune2fs given it can deal with force checking any filesystem whether it’s the primary’s ( / ) or some other.
Additional notes
You’ll typically see the «Maximum mount count:» and «check interval:» parameters associated with a partition that’s been formatted as ext2/3/4. Often times they’re configured like so:
$ tune2fs -l /dev/sda5 | grep -E "Mount count|Maximum mount|interval" Mount count: 178 Maximum mount count: -1 Check interval: 0 ()
When the parameters are set this way, the device will never perform an fsck during mounting. This is fairly typical with most distros.
There are 2 forces that drive a check. Either number of mounts or an elapse time. The «Check interval» is the time based one. You can say every 2 weeks to that argument, 2w. See the tune2fs man page for more info.
NOTE: Also make sure to understand that tune2fs is a filesystem command, not a device command. So it doesn’t work with just any old device, /dev/sda , unless there’s an ext2/3/4 filesystem there, the command tune2fs is meaningless, it has to be used against a partition that’s been formatted with one of those types of filessystems.
References
How to Use ‘fsck’ to Repair Linux File System Errors
Linux Filesystems are responsible for organizing how data is stored and recovered. One way or another, with time, the filesystem may become corrupted and certain parts of it may not be accessible. If your filesystem develops such inconsistency it is recommended to verify its integrity.
This can be completed via a system utility called fsck (file system consistency check), which checks the root file system automatically during boot time or ran manually.
In this article, we are going to review the fsck command and its usage to help you repair Linux disk errors.
When to Use fsck Command in Linux
There are different scenarios when you will want to run fsck. Here are a few examples:
- The system fails to boot.
- Files on the system become corrupt (often you may see input/output error).
- The attached drive (including flash drives/SD cards) is not working as expected.
fsck Command Options
The fsck command needs to be run with superuser privileges or root. You can use it with different arguments. Their usage depends on your specific case. Below you will see some of the more important options:
- -A – Used for checking all filesystems. The list is taken from /etc/fstab .
- -C – Show progress bar.
- -l – Locks the device to guarantee no other program will try to use the partition during the check.
- -M – Do not check mounted filesystems.
- -N – Only show what would be done – no actual changes are made.
- -P – If you want to check filesystems in parallel, including root.
- -R – Do not check the root filesystem. This is useful only with ‘ -A ‘.
- -r – Provide statistics for each device that is being checked.
- -T – Does not show the title.
- -t – Exclusively specify the Linux filesystem types to be checked. Types can be comma-separated lists.
- -V – Provide a description of what is being done.
Run fsck Command to Repair Linux File System Errors
In order to run fsck, you will need to ensure that the partition you are going to check is not mounted. For the purpose of this article, I will use my second drive /dev/sdb mounted in /mnt .
Here is what happens if I try to run fsck when the partition is mounted.
To avoid this unmount the partition using.
Then fsck can be safely run with.
Understanding fsck Exit Codes
After running fsck, it will return an exit code. These codes can be seen in fsck’s manual by running:
# man fsck 0 No errors 1 Filesystem errors corrected 2 System should be rebooted 4 Filesystem errors were left uncorrected 8 Operational error 16 Usage or syntax error 32 Checking canceled by user request 128 Shared-library error
Fsck Repair Linux Filesystem
Sometimes more than one error can be found on a filesystem. In such cases, you may want fsck to automatically attempt to correct the errors. This can be done with:
The -y flag, automatically “yes” to any prompts from fsck to correct an error.
Similarly, you can run the same on all filesystems (without root):
How to Run fsck on Linux Root Partition
In some cases, you may need to run fsck on the root partition of your system. Since you cannot run fsck while the partition is mounted, you can try one of these options:
We will review both situations.
Force fsck Upon System Boot
This is relatively easy to complete, the only thing you need to do is create a file called forcefsck in the root partition of your system. Use the following command:
Then you can simply force or schedule a reboot of your system. During the next bootup, the fsck will be performed. If downtime is critical, it is recommended to plan this carefully, since if there are many used inodes on your system, fsck may take some extra time.
After your system boots, check if the file still exists:
If it does, you may want to remove it in order to avoid fsck on every system boot.
Run fsck in Rescue Mode
Running fsck in rescue mode requires a few more steps. First, prepare your system for reboot. Stop any critical services like MySQL/MariaDB etc and then type.
During the boot, hold down the shift key so that the grub menu is shown. Select “Advanced options”.
Then choose “Recovery mode”.
In the next menu select “fsck”.
You will be asked if you wish to have your / filesystem remounted. Select “yes” .
You should see something similar to this.
You can then resume normal boot, by selecting “Resume”.
Conclusion
In this tutorial, you learned how to use fsck and run consistency checks on different Linux filesystems. If you have any questions about fsck, please do not hesitate to submit them in the comment section below.
I am a bachelor in computer science and a Linux Foundation Certified System Administrator. Currently working as a Senior Technical support in the hosting industry. In my free time I like testing new software and inline skating.
Each tutorial at TecMint is created by a team of experienced Linux system administrators so that it meets our high-quality standards.
Related Posts
37 thoughts on “How to Use ‘fsck’ to Repair Linux File System Errors”
fsck from util-linux 2.38.1 fsck.ext2: Bad magic number in super-block while trying to open /dev/SDA /dev/SDA : the super-block could not be read or does not describe a valid ext2/ext3/ext4 filesystem.
If the device is valid and it really contains an ext2/ext3/ext4 filesystem (and if not swap or ufs or something else), then the superblock is corrupt, and you might try running e2fsck with an alternate superblock:
# e2fsck -b 8193 or e2fsck -b 32768
Found a dos partition table in /dev/SDA. When I try to run the e2fsck commands it gave, it shows sh: syntax error: unexpected newline. And then when I try to unmount /dev/SDA it can’t unmount because it’s an invalid argument? I’m a total beginner at Linux and I really don’t know what to do now Reply
Capitalization and spelling matter on the shell. Device names are never capitalized (so sda, not SDA). unmount should be umount, too. Reply
I updated to the newest version of Ubuntu, now it will not boot. I get the BusyBox black screen and when I used the exit command, here’s the output: /init: line 866: logsave: not found
Failure: File system check of the root filesystem failed
The root filesystem in /dev/sda6 requires a manual fsck But when I attempt to do so, I get a text file busy error. How can I fix this? Reply
Good morning, happy new year to you. Thank you for the article and your time spent on this website your time spent doing this is very much appreciated by me. I am using a laptop and ran a disk check using the smart control application which stated errors were found. Although I deleted the partition and reformatted the drive the errors remained which made me curious about error checking and cyclic redundancy checks which lead me to do a little research on physical drive checks and more detailed analysis. Doing searching online drove me here and to the FSCK command which even though I had wiped the drive still showed a wealth of errors (As I ran it without the -y flag initially), your article provided some clarity I was missing and made me wonder if some of these errors are reached because there is still junk data left on the drive because I have not low-level formatted it. So now I am running the command as ‘sudo fsck -y -c /dev/sdb’ Now it will search for errors, fix them as found, and display ongoing progress… Which begs the question… If I low-level formatted this drive by overwriting it with zero, would these errors then be wiped free? And if that is true, then the error that may still be found would be from smart control querying the device bios to see if it’s detected possible hardware failure (As the drive would now be wiped completely clean of any software issues) which means that fsck is really only untangling crosslinked files/sectors/clusters, etc. Forgive the stupid questions, I am not well educated on computer drives from a hardware perspective, or a read/write/data perspective so I am aware I’m ignorant and most articles I’ve read only give so much in-depth information. In any case, I am going to let this command run in its entirety and see what the outcome is. Thank you for your time. Thank you for the article. Reply
Does Linux (ubuntu) install run fsck before installing? or format automatically “note” the problematic sectors on the new partitions? I try to install Ubuntu and always ran into disc problems How to force a correction before the install? Reply