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TUNE2FS(8)		    System Manager's Manual		    TUNE2FS(8)

NAME
       tune2fs	- adjust tunable file system parameters	on ext2/ext3/ext4 file
       systems

SYNOPSIS
       tune2fs [ -l ] [	-c max-mount-counts ] [	-e errors-behavior ] [ -f ]  [
       -i interval-between-checks ] [ -I new_inode_size	] [ -j ] [ -J journal-
       options ] [ -m reserved-blocks-percentage ] [ -o	[^]mount-options[,...]
       ]  [  -r	 reserved-blocks-count	] [ -u user ] [	-g group ] [ -C	mount-
       count ] [ -E extended-options ] [ -L volume-label ] [ -M	 last-mounted-
       directory  ]  [	-O [^]feature[,...]  ] [ -Q quota-options ] [ -T time-
       last-checked ] [	-U UUID	] [ -z undo_file ] device

DESCRIPTION
       tune2fs allows the system administrator to adjust various tunable  file
       system  parameters on Linux ext2, ext3, or ext4 file systems.  The cur-
       rent values of these options can	be displayed by	using the -l option to
       tune2fs(8) program, or by using the dumpe2fs(8) program.

       The device specifier can	either be a filename (i.e., /dev/sda1),	 or  a
       LABEL  or  UUID specifier: "LABEL=volume-label" or "UUID=uuid".	(i.e.,
       LABEL=home or UUID=e40486c6-84d5-4f2f-b99c-032281799c9d).

OPTIONS
       -c max-mount-counts
	      Adjust the number	of mounts after	which the file system will  be
	      checked  by  e2fsck(8).  If max-mount-counts is the string "ran-
	      dom", tune2fs will use a random value between  20	 and  40.   If
	      max-mount-counts is 0 or -1, the number of times the file	system
	      is mounted will be disregarded by	e2fsck(8) and the kernel.

	      Staggering  the  mount-counts at which file systems are forcibly
	      checked will avoid all file systems being	checked	 at  one  time
	      when using journaled file	systems.

	      Mount-count-dependent  checking  is disabled by default to avoid
	      unanticipated long reboots while e2fsck does its work.   If  you
	      are  concerned about file	system corruptions caused by potential
	      hardware problems	of kernel bugs,	a better solution than	mount-
	      count-dependent checking is to use the e2scrub(8)	program.  This
	      does require placing the file system on an LVM volume, however.

       -C mount-count
	      Set  the	number	of times the file system has been mounted.  If
	      set to a greater value than the max-mount-counts	parameter  set
	      by  the  -c  option, e2fsck(8) will check	the file system	at the
	      next reboot.

       -e error-behavior
	      Change the behavior of the kernel	code when errors are detected.
	      In all cases, a file system error	will cause e2fsck(8) to	 check
	      the  file	system on the next boot.  error-behavior can be	one of
	      the following:

		   continue    Continue	normal execution.

		   remount-ro  Remount file system read-only.

		   panic       Cause a kernel panic.

       -E extended-options
	      Set extended options for the file	system.	 Extended options  are
	      comma separated, and may take an argument	using the equals ('=')
	      sign.  The following extended options are	supported:

		   clear_mmp
			  Reset	 the  MMP  block  (if  any)  back to the clean
			  state.  Use only if absolutely certain the device is
			  not currently	mounted	or being fscked, or major file
			  system corruption can	result.	 Needs '-f'.

		   encoding=encoding-name
			  Enable the casefold feature in the super  block  and
			  set  encoding-name  as  the encoding to be used.  If
			  encoding-name	is not specified, utf8	is  used.  The
			  encoding  cannot  be	altered	if casefold was	previ-
			  ously	enabled.

		   encoding_flags=encoding-flags
			  Define parameters for	file name  character  encoding
			  operations.  If a flag is not	changed	using this pa-
			  rameter,  its	default	value is used.	encoding-flags
			  should be a comma-separated lists of flags to	be en-
			  abled.  The flags cannot be altered if casefold  was
			  previously enabled.

			  The  only  flag  that	can be set right now is	strict
			  which	means that invalid strings should be  rejected
			  by  the  file	system.	 In the	default	configuration,
			  the strict flag is disabled.

		   force_fsck
			  Set a	flag in	the file system	superblock  indicating
			  that	errors	have been found.  This will force fsck
			  to run at the	next mount.

		   hash_alg=hash-alg
			  Set the default hash algorithm used for file systems
			  with hashed b-tree  directories.   Valid  algorithms
			  accepted are:	legacy,	half_md4, and tea.

		   mmp_update_interval=interval
			  Adjust  the  initial MMP update interval to interval
			  seconds.  Specifying an interval of 0	means  to  use
			  the  default	interval.  The specified interval must
			  be less than 300 seconds.   Requires	that  the  mmp
			  feature be enabled.

		   mount_opts=mount_option_string
			  Set  a  set  of  default mount options which will be
			  used when the	file system is	mounted.   Unlike  the
			  bitmask-based	 default  mount	 options  which	can be
			  specified with the -o	option,	mount_option_string is
			  an arbitrary string with  a  maximum	length	of  63
			  bytes, which is stored in the	superblock.

			  The  ext4  file  system  driver will first apply the
			  bitmask-based	default	options, and  then  parse  the
			  mount_option_string,	before	parsing	 the mount op-
			  tions	passed from the	mount(8) program.

			  This superblock setting is only honored  in  2.6.35+
			  kernels;  and	 not  at all by	the ext2 and ext3 file
			  system drivers.

		   orphan_file_size=size
			  Set size of the file for tracking unlinked but still
			  open inodes and inodes with  truncate	 in  progress.
			  Larger file allows for better	scalability, reserving
			  a few	blocks per cpu is ideal.

		   stride=stride-size
			  Configure  the  file	system	for  a RAID array with
			  stride-size file system blocks. This is  the	number
			  of  blocks  read or written to disk before moving to
			  next disk. This mostly  affects  placement  of  file
			  system  metadata  like  bitmaps at mke2fs(2) time to
			  avoid	placing	them on	a single disk, which can  hurt
			  the performance.  It may also	be used	by block allo-
			  cator.

		   stripe_width=stripe-width
			  Configure  the  file	system	for  a RAID array with
			  stripe-width file system blocks per stripe. This  is
			  typically  be	stride-size * N, where N is the	number
			  of data disks	in the RAID (e.g. RAID 5 N+1,  RAID  6
			  N+2).	  This	allows	the block allocator to prevent
			  read-modify-write of the parity in a RAID stripe  if
			  possible when	the data is written.

		   test_fs
			  Set  a flag in the file system superblock indicating
			  that it may be  mounted  using  experimental	kernel
			  code,	such as	the ext4dev file system.

		   ^test_fs
			  Clear	 the  test_fs flag, indicating the file	system
			  should only be mounted using	production-level  file
			  system code.

       -f     Force  the tune2fs operation to complete even in the face	of er-
	      rors.  This option is useful when	removing the has_journal  file
	      system  feature from a file system which has an external journal
	      (or is corrupted such that it appears to have an external	 jour-
	      nal),  but that external journal is not available.   If the file
	      system appears to	require	journal	replay,	the -f	flag  must  be
	      specified	twice to proceed.

	      WARNING:	Removing  an external journal from a file system which
	      was not cleanly unmounted	without	first replaying	 the  external
	      journal  can  result in severe data loss and file	system corrup-
	      tion.

       -g group
	      Set the group which can use the  reserved	 file  system  blocks.
	      The  group parameter can be a numerical gid or a group name.  If
	      a	group name is given, it	is converted to	a numerical gid	before
	      it is stored in the superblock.

       -i  interval-between-checks[d|m|w]
	      Adjust the maximal time between two file system checks.  No suf-
	      fix or d will interpret the  number  interval-between-checks  as
	      days, m as months, and w as weeks.  A value of zero will disable
	      the time-dependent checking.

	      There  are pros and cons to disabling these periodic checks; see
	      the discussion under the -c (mount-count-dependent check)	option
	      for details.

       -I     Change the inode size used by the	file system.	This  requires
	      rewriting	 the  inode table, so it requires that the file	system
	      is checked for consistency first using e2fsck(8).	  This	opera-
	      tion  can	also take a while and the file system can be corrupted
	      and data lost if it is interrupted while in the middle  of  con-
	      verting  the  file  system.   Backing  up	the file system	before
	      changing inode size is recommended.

	      File systems with	an inode size of  128  bytes  do  not  support
	      timestamps  beyond January 19, 2038.  Inodes which are 256 bytes
	      or larger	will support extended timestamps,  project  id's,  and
	      the ability to store some	extended attributes in the inode table
	      for improved performance.

       -j     Add an ext3 journal to the file system.  If the -J option	is not
	      specified, the default journal parameters	will be	used to	create
	      an  appropriately	sized journal (given the size of the file sys-
	      tem) stored within the file system.  Note	that you must be using
	      a	kernel which has ext3 support in order to actually make	use of
	      the journal.

	      If this option is	used to	create a journal  on  a	 mounted  file
	      system, an immutable file, .journal, will	be created in the top-
	      level  directory	of the file system, as it is the only safe way
	      to create	the journal inode while	the file  system  is  mounted.
	      While  the ext3 journal is visible, it is	not safe to delete it,
	      or modify	it while the file system is mounted; for  this	reason
	      the  file	 is  marked  immutable.	 While checking	unmounted file
	      systems, e2fsck(8) will automatically move .journal files	to the
	      invisible, reserved journal inode.  For all file systems	except
	      for  the root file system,  this should happen automatically and
	      naturally	during the next	reboot cycle.	Since  the  root  file
	      system is	mounted	read-only, e2fsck(8) must be run from a	rescue
	      floppy in	order to effect	this transition.

	      On  some distributions, such as Debian, if an initial ramdisk is
	      used, the	initrd scripts will automatically convert an ext2 root
	      file system to ext3 if the /etc/fstab file  specifies  the  ext3
	      file system for the root file system in order to avoid requiring
	      the  use	of  a rescue floppy to add an ext3 journal to the root
	      file system.

       -J journal-options
	      Override the default ext3	journal	 parameters.  Journal  options
	      are  comma  separated, and may take an argument using the	equals
	      ('=')  sign.  The	following journal options are supported:

		   device=external-journal
			  Attach the file system to the	journal	 block	device
			  located  on  external-journal.  The external journal
			  must have been already created using the command

			  mke2fs -O journal_dev	external-journal

			  Note that external-journal must  be  formatted  with
			  the  same  block  size as file systems which will be
			  using	it.  In	addition, while	there is  support  for
			  attaching multiple file systems to a single external
			  journal,  the	Linux kernel and e2fsck(8) do not cur-
			  rently support shared	external journals yet.

			  Instead of specifying	a device name directly,	exter-
			  nal-journal can also	be  specified  by  either  LA-
			  BEL=label  or	UUID=UUID to locate the	external jour-
			  nal by either	the volume label or UUID stored	in the
			  ext2 superblock at the start of  the	journal.   Use
			  dumpe2fs(8) to display a journal device's volume la-
			  bel and UUID.	 See also the -L option	of tune2fs(8).

		   fast_commit_size=fast-commit-size
			  Create  an  additional  fast	commit journal area of
			  size fast-commit-size	 kilobytes.   This  option  is
			  only	valid if fast_commit feature is	enabled	on the
			  file system. If this option is not specified and  if
			  fast_commit  feature	is turned on, fast commit area
			  size defaults	to journal-size	/  64  megabytes.  The
			  total	 size  of the journal with fast_commit feature
			  set is journal-size +	 (  fast-commit-size  *	 1024)
			  megabytes.  The  total  journal  size	may be no more
			  than 10,240,000 file system blocks or	half the total
			  file system size (whichever is smaller).

		   location=journal-location
			  Specify the location of the journal.	 The  argument
			  journal-location  can	either be specified as a block
			  number, or if	the number has a units	suffix	(e.g.,
			  'M',	'G', etc.) interpret it	as the offset from the
			  beginning of the file	system.

		   size=journal-size
			  Create a journal stored in the file system  of  size
			  journal-size	megabytes.    The  size	of the journal
			  must be at least  1024  file	system	blocks	(i.e.,
			  1  MiB if using 1k blocks, 4 MiB if using 4k blocks,
			  etc.)	 and may be no more than 10,240,000 file  sys-
			  tem  blocks.	There must be enough free space	in the
			  file system to create	a journal of that size.

	      Only one of the size or device options can be given for  a  file
	      system.

       -l     List  the	 contents of the file system superblock, including the
	      current values of	the parameters that can	be set via  this  pro-
	      gram.

       -L volume-label
	      Set  the	volume label of	the file system.  Ext2 file system la-
	      bels can be at most  16  characters  long;  if  volume-label  is
	      longer  than 16 characters, tune2fs will truncate	it and print a
	      warning.	For other file systems that support online  label  ma-
	      nipulation  and  are  mounted  tune2fs will work as well,	but it
	      will not attempt to truncate the volume-label at all.  The  vol-
	      ume  label  can  be used by mount(8), fsck(8), and /etc/fstab(5)
	      (and possibly others) by specifying  LABEL=volume-label  instead
	      of a block special device	name like /dev/hda5.

       -m reserved-blocks-percentage
	      Set  the	percentage  of the file	system which may only be allo-
	      cated by privileged processes.   Reserving some number  of  file
	      system  blocks  for use by privileged processes is done to avoid
	      file system fragmentation, and to	allow system daemons, such  as
	      syslogd(8),  to  continue	to function correctly after non-privi-
	      leged processes are prevented from writing to the	 file  system.
	      Normally,	the default percentage of reserved blocks is 5%.

       -M last-mounted-directory
	      Set the last-mounted directory for the file system.

       -o [^]mount-option[,...]
	      Set  or  clear  the  indicated default mount options in the file
	      system.  Default mount options can be overridden	by  mount  op-
	      tions  specified	either in /etc/fstab(5)	or on the command line
	      arguments	to mount(8).  Older kernels may	not support this  fea-
	      ture;  in	 particular,  kernels which predate 2.4.20 will	almost
	      certainly	ignore the default mount  options  field  in  the  su-
	      perblock.

	      More  than  one mount option can be cleared or set by separating
	      features with commas.  Mount options prefixed with a caret char-
	      acter ('^') will be cleared in  the  file	 system's  superblock;
	      mount options without a prefix character or prefixed with	a plus
	      character	('+') will be added to the file	system.

	      The following mount options can be set or	cleared	using tune2fs:

		   debug  Enable debugging code	for this file system.

		   bsdgroups
			  Emulate  BSD	behavior when creating new files: they
			  will take the	group-id of  the  directory  in	 which
			  they	were  created.	The standard System V behavior
			  is the default, where	newly created  files  take  on
			  the  fsgid of	the current process, unless the	direc-
			  tory has the setgid bit set, in which	case it	 takes
			  the gid from the parent directory, and also gets the
			  setgid bit set if it is a directory itself.

		   user_xattr
			  Enable user-specified	extended attributes.

		   acl	  Enable Posix Access Control Lists.

		   uid16  Disables 32-bit UIDs and GIDs.  This is for interop-
			  erability  with  older  kernels which	only store and
			  expect 16-bit	values.

		   journal_data
			  When the file	system is mounted with journaling  en-
			  abled,  all  data  (not  just	metadata) is committed
			  into the journal prior to  being  written  into  the
			  main file system.

		   journal_data_ordered
			  When	the file system	is mounted with	journaling en-
			  abled, all data is forced directly out to  the  main
			  file system prior to its metadata being committed to
			  the journal.

		   journal_data_writeback
			  When	the file system	is mounted with	journaling en-
			  abled, data may be written into the main file	system
			  after	its metadata has been committed	to  the	 jour-
			  nal.	 This may increase throughput, however,	it may
			  allow	old data to appear in files after a crash  and
			  journal recovery.

		   nobarrier
			  The  file system will	be mounted with	barrier	opera-
			  tions	in the journal disabled.  (This	option is cur-
			  rently only supported	by the ext4 file system	driver
			  in 2.6.35+ kernels.)

		   block_validity
			  The file system will be mounted with	the  block_va-
			  lidity  option enabled, which	causes extra checks to
			  be performed after reading or	writing	from the  file
			  system.   This  prevents  corrupted  metadata	blocks
			  from causing file system damage by overwriting parts
			  of the inode table or	block group descriptors.  This
			  comes	at the cost of increased memory	and CPU	 over-
			  head,	 so it is enabled only for debugging purposes.
			  (This	option is currently only supported by the ext4
			  file system driver in	2.6.35+	kernels.)

		   discard
			  The file system will be  mounted  with  the  discard
			  mount	 option.  This will cause the file system dri-
			  ver to attempt to use	the  trim/discard  feature  of
			  some	storage	devices	(such as SSD's and thin-provi-
			  sioned drives	available in some  enterprise  storage
			  arrays) to inform the	storage	device that blocks be-
			  longing  to  deleted	files  can be reused for other
			  purposes.  (This option is currently only  supported
			  by the ext4 file system driver in 2.6.35+ kernels.)

		   nodelalloc
			  The  file system will	be mounted with	the nodelalloc
			  mount	option.	 This will disable the delayed alloca-
			  tion feature.	 (This option is currently  only  sup-
			  ported  by  the  ext4	 file system driver in 2.6.35+
			  kernels.)

       -O [^]feature[,...]
	      Set or clear the indicated file system features (options)	in the
	      file system.  More than one file system feature can  be  cleared
	      or set by	separating features with commas.  File System features
	      prefixed	with  a	 caret	character ('^')	will be	cleared	in the
	      file system's superblock;	file system features without a	prefix
	      character	 or prefixed with a plus character ('+') will be added
	      to the file system.  For a detailed description of the file sys-
	      tem features, please see the man page ext4(5).

	      The following file system	features can be	set or	cleared	 using
	      tune2fs:

		   64bit  Enable  the  file  system  to	 be  larger  than 2^32
			  blocks.

		   casefold
			  Enable support for file  system  level  casefolding.
			  The  option can be cleared only if filesystem	has no
			  directories with F attribute.

		   dir_index
			  Use hashed b-trees to	speed up lookups for large di-
			  rectories.

		   dir_nlink
			  Allow	more than 65000	subdirectories per directory.

		   ea_inode
			  Allow	the value of each  extended  attribute	to  be
			  placed  in  the  data	 blocks	of a separate inode if
			  necessary, increasing	the limit on the size and num-
			  ber of extended attributes per file.	 Tune2fs  cur-
			  rently  only	supports setting this file system fea-
			  ture.

		   encrypt
			  Enable support for  file  system  level  encryption.
			  Tune2fs  currently  only  supports setting this file
			  system feature.

		   extent Enable the use of extent trees to store the location
			  of data blocks in inodes.   Tune2fs  currently  only
			  supports setting this	file system feature.

		   extra_isize
			  Enable the extended inode fields used	by ext4.

		   filetype
			  Store	file type information in directory entries.

		   flex_bg
			  Allow	 bitmaps and inode tables for a	block group to
			  be placed anywhere on	the  storage  media.   Tune2fs
			  will not reorganize the location of the inode	tables
			  and allocation bitmaps, as mke2fs(8) will do when it
			  creates a freshly formatted file system with flex_bg
			  enabled.

		   has_journal
			  Use a	journal	to ensure file system consistency even
			  across  unclean  shutdowns.  Setting the file	system
			  feature is equivalent	to using the -j	option.

		   fast_commit
			  Enable fast commit  journaling  feature  to  improve
			  fsync	latency.

		   large_dir
			  Increase the limit on	the number of files per	direc-
			  tory.	  Tune2fs currently only supports setting this
			  file system feature.

		   huge_file
			  Support files	larger than 2 terabytes	in size.

		   large_file
			  File System can contain files	that are greater  than
			  2 GiB.

		   metadata_csum
			  Store	 a  checksum  to  protect the contents in each
			  metadata block.

		   metadata_csum_seed
			  Allow	the file system	to store the metadata checksum
			  seed in the superblock, enabling  the	 administrator
			  to  change the UUID of a file	system using the meta-
			  data_csum feature while it is	mounted.

		   mmp	  Enable or disable multiple  mount  protection	 (MMP)
			  feature.

		   orphan_file
			  Store	 the  list of orphan inodes in multiple	blocks
			  instead of a single linked-list to  avoid  potential
			  scalability bottlenecks for workloads	that perform a
			  large	 number	 of  file truncations or extensions in
			  parallel.

		   project
			  Enable  project  ID  tracking.   This	 is  used  for
			  project quota	tracking.

		   quota  Enable internal file system quota inodes.

		   read-only
			  Force	the kernel to mount the	file system read-only.

		   resize_inode
			  Reserve  space  so  the block	group descriptor table
			  may grow  in	the  future.   Tune2fs	only  supports
			  clearing this	file system feature.

		   sparse_super
			  Limit	the number of backup superblocks to save space
			  on  large file systems.  Tune2fs currently only sup-
			  ports	setting	this file system feature.

		   stable_inodes
			  Prevent the file system from being shrunk or	having
			  its  UUID changed, in	order to allow the use of spe-
			  cialized encryption settings that make  use  of  the
			  inode	numbers	and UUID.  Tune2fs currently only sup-
			  ports	setting	this file system feature.

		   uninit_bg
			  Allow	the kernel to initialize bitmaps and inode ta-
			  bles	lazily,	 and  to keep a	high watermark for the
			  unused inodes	in a file system, to reduce  e2fsck(8)
			  time.	 The first e2fsck run after enabling this fea-
			  ture	will take the full time, but subsequent	e2fsck
			  runs will take only a	fraction of the	original time,
			  depending on how full	the file system	is.

		   verity Enable support for verity protected files.   Tune2fs
			  currently  only  supports  setting  this file	system
			  feature.

	      After setting or clearing	sparse_super, uninit_bg, filetype,  or
	      resize_inode  file  system features, the file system may require
	      being checked using e2fsck(8) to return the  file	 system	 to  a
	      consistent  state.  Tune2fs will print a message requesting that
	      the system administrator run e2fsck(8) if	necessary.  After set-
	      ting the dir_index feature, e2fsck -D can	be run to convert  ex-
	      isting  directories  to the hashed B-tree	format.	 Enabling cer-
	      tain file	system features	may prevent the	file system from being
	      mounted by kernels which do not support those features.  In par-
	      ticular, the uninit_bg and flex_bg features are  only  supported
	      by the ext4 file system.

       -r reserved-blocks-count
	      Set the number of	reserved file system blocks.

       -Q quota-options
	      Sets  'quota'  feature  on the superblock	and works on the quota
	      files for	the given quota	type. Quota options could  be  one  or
	      more of the following:

		   [^]usrquota
			  Sets/clears user quota inode in the superblock.

		   [^]grpquota
			  Sets/clears group quota inode	in the superblock.

		   [^]prjquota
			  Sets/clears project quota inode in the superblock.

       -T time-last-checked
	      Set the time the file system was last checked using e2fsck.  The
	      time  is	interpreted  using the current (local) timezone.  This
	      can be useful in scripts which use a Logical Volume  Manager  to
	      make  a consistent snapshot of a file system, and	then check the
	      file system during off hours to make sure	it  hasn't  been  cor-
	      rupted  due  to  hardware	problems, etc.	If the file system was
	      clean, then this option can be used to set the last checked time
	      on the original file system.  The	format of time-last-checked is
	      the international	date format, with an optional time  specifier,
	      i.e.   YYYYMMDD[HH[MM[SS]]].   The keyword now is	also accepted,
	      in which case the	last checked time will be set to  the  current
	      time.

       -u user
	      Set  the user who	can use	the reserved file system blocks.  user
	      can be a numerical uid or	a user name.  If a user	name is	given,
	      it is converted to a numerical uid before	it is  stored  in  the
	      superblock.

       -U UUID
	      Set  the universally unique identifier (UUID) of the file	system
	      to UUID.	The format of the UUID is a series of hex digits sepa-
	      rated	     by		 hyphens,	   like		 this:
	      "c1b9d5a2-f162-11cf-9ece-0020afc76f16".	The UUID parameter may
	      also be one of the following:

		   clear  clear	the file system	UUID

		   random generate a new randomly-generated UUID

		   time	  generate a new time-based UUID

	      The UUID may be used by  mount(8),  fsck(8),  and	 /etc/fstab(5)
	      (and possibly others) by specifying UUID=uuid instead of a block
	      special device name like /dev/hda1.

	      See  uuidgen(8)  for  more  information.	If the system does not
	      have a good random  number  generator  such  as  /dev/random  or
	      /dev/urandom,  tune2fs  will automatically use a time-based UUID
	      instead of a randomly-generated UUID.

       -z undo_file
	      Before overwriting a file	system block, write the	 old  contents
	      of  the  block to	an undo	file.  This undo file can be used with
	      e2undo(8)	to restore the old contents of the file	system	should
	      something	 go  wrong.   If  the  empty  string  is passed	as the
	      undo_file	argument, the undo file	will  be  written  to  a  file
	      named  tune2fs-device.e2undo  in the directory specified via the
	      E2FSPROGS_UNDO_DIR environment variable.

	      WARNING: The undo	file cannot be used to recover from a power or
	      system crash.

BUGS
       We haven't found	any bugs yet.  That doesn't mean there aren't any...

AUTHOR
       tune2fs was written by Remy Card	 <Remy.Card@linux.org>.	  It  is  cur-
       rently being maintained by Theodore Ts'o	<tytso@alum.mit.edu>.  tune2fs
       uses the	ext2fs library written by Theodore Ts'o	<tytso@mit.edu>.  This
       manual  page  was  written  by  Christian Kuhtz <chk@data-hh.Hanse.DE>.
       Time-dependent checking was added by Uwe	Ohse <uwe@tirka.gun.de>.

AVAILABILITY
       tune2fs is  part	 of  the  e2fsprogs  package  and  is  available  from
       http://e2fsprogs.sourceforge.net.

SEE ALSO
       debugfs(8), dumpe2fs(8),	e2fsck(8), mke2fs(8), ext4(5)

E2fsprogs version 1.47.2	 January 2025			    TUNE2FS(8)

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