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

NAME
       fsck_ffs, fsck_ufs -- file system consistency check and interactive re-
       pair

SYNOPSIS
       fsck_ffs	[-BFprfny] [-b block] [-c level] [-m mode] filesystem ...

DESCRIPTION
       The  specified  disk  partitions	 and/or	 file systems are checked.  In
       "preen" or "check clean"	mode the clean flag of each file system's  su-
       perblock	 is  examined  and only	those file systems that	are not	marked
       clean are checked.  File	systems	are marked clean  when	they  are  un-
       mounted,	 when  they have been mounted read-only, or when fsck_ffs runs
       on them successfully.  If the -f	option is specified, the file  systems
       will be checked regardless of the state of their	clean flag.

       The  kernel  takes  care	that only a restricted class of	innocuous file
       system inconsistencies can happen unless	hardware or software  failures
       intervene.  These are limited to	the following:

	     Unreferenced inodes
	     Link counts in inodes too large
	     Missing blocks in the free	map
	     Blocks in the free	map also in files
	     Counts in the super-block wrong

       These  are  the	only  inconsistencies that fsck_ffs with the -p	option
       will correct; if	it encounters other inconsistencies, it	exits with  an
       abnormal	 return	 status	 and  an automatic reboot will then fail.  For
       each corrected inconsistency one	or more	lines will be printed  identi-
       fying  the file system on which the correction will take	place, and the
       nature of the correction.  After	successfully correcting	a file system,
       fsck_ffs	will print the number of files on that file system, the	number
       of used and free	blocks,	and the	percentage of fragmentation.

       If sent a QUIT signal, fsck_ffs will finish  the	 file  system  checks,
       then  exit  with	an abnormal return status that causes an automatic re-
       boot to fail.  This is useful when you want to finish the  file	system
       checks  during an automatic reboot, but do not want the machine to come
       up multiuser after the checks complete.

       If fsck_ffs receives a SIGINFO (see the "status"	argument for  stty(1))
       signal,	a  line	 will be written to the	standard output	indicating the
       name of the device currently being checked, the	current	 phase	number
       and phase-specific progress information.

       Without the -p option, fsck_ffs audits and interactively	repairs	incon-
       sistent	conditions  for	file systems.  If the file system is inconsis-
       tent the	operator is prompted for concurrence before each correction is
       attempted.  It should be	noted that  some  of  the  corrective  actions
       which  are not correctable under	the -p option will result in some loss
       of data.	 The amount and	severity of data lost may be  determined  from
       the diagnostic output.  The default action for each consistency correc-
       tion is to wait for the operator	to respond yes or no.  If the operator
       does not	have write permission on the file system fsck_ffs will default
       to a -n action.

       The following flags are interpreted by fsck_ffs:

       -F      Determine  whether  the file system needs to be cleaned immedi-
	       ately in	foreground, or if its  cleaning	 can  be  deferred  to
	       background.   To	 be  eligible  for background cleaning it must
	       have been running with soft updates, not	have  been  marked  as
	       needing	a  foreground  check, and be mounted and writable when
	       the background check is to be done.  If	these  conditions  are
	       met, then fsck_ffs exits	with a zero exit status.  Otherwise it
	       exits  with  a  non-zero	 exit  status.	 If the	file system is
	       clean, it will exit with	a non-zero exit	 status	 so  that  the
	       clean  status  of  the file system can be verified and reported
	       during the foreground checks.  Note that	when invoked with  the
	       -F  flag,  no  cleanups are done.  The only thing that fsck_ffs
	       does is to determine whether a foreground or  background	 check
	       is needed and exit with an appropriate status code.

       -B      A  check	is done	on the specified and possibly active file sys-
	       tem.  The set of	corrections that can be	 done  is  limited  to
	       those  done  when  running in preen mode	(see the -p flag).  If
	       unexpected errors are found, the	file system is marked as need-
	       ing a foreground	check and fsck_ffs  exits  without  attempting
	       any further cleaning.

       -b      Use the block specified immediately after the flag as the super
	       block for the file system.  An alternate	super block is usually
	       located at block	32 for UFS1, and block 160 for UFS2.

       -C      Check  if  file system was dismouted cleanly.  If so, skip file
	       system checks (like "preen").  However, if the file system  was
	       not  cleanly dismounted,	do full	checks,	is if fsck_ffs was in-
	       voked without -C.

       -c      Convert the file	system to the specified	level.	Note that  the
	       level of	a file system can only be raised.  There are currently
	       four levels defined:

	       0       The file	system is in the old (static table) format.

	       1       The file	system is in the new (dynamic table) format.

	       2       The  file system	supports 32-bit	uid's and gid's, short
		       symbolic	links are stored in the	inode, and directories
		       have an added field showing the file type.

	       3       If maxcontig is greater than one, build the  free  seg-
		       ment  maps to aid in finding contiguous sets of blocks.
		       If maxcontig is equal to	one, delete any	existing  seg-
		       ment maps.

	       In  interactive	mode,  fsck_ffs	will list the conversion to be
	       made and	ask whether the	conversion should be done.  If a nega-
	       tive answer is given, no	further	operations  are	 done  on  the
	       file  system.  In preen mode, the conversion is listed and done
	       if possible without user	interaction.  Conversion in preen mode
	       is best used when all the file systems are being	 converted  at
	       once.   The  format of a	file system can	be determined from the
	       first line of output from dumpfs(8).

	       This option implies the -f flag.

       -f      Force fsck_ffs to check `clean' file systems when preening.

       -m      Use the mode specified in octal immediately after the  flag  as
	       the  permission bits to use when	creating the lost+found	direc-
	       tory rather than	the default 1777.  In particular, systems that
	       do not wish to have lost	files accessible by all	users  on  the
	       system should use a more	restrictive set	of permissions such as
	       700.

       -n      Assume  a no response to	all questions asked by fsck_ffs	except
	       for `CONTINUE?',	which is assumed to  be	 affirmative;  do  not
	       open the	file system for	writing.

       -p      Preen file systems (see above).

       -r      Free  up	excess unused inodes.  Decreasing the number of	preal-
	       located inodes reduces the  running  time  of  future  runs  of
	       fsck_ffs	 and  frees up space that can allocated	to files.  The
	       -r option is ignored when running in preen mode.

       -y      Assume a	yes response to	all questions asked by fsck_ffs;  this
	       should  be used with great caution as this is a free license to
	       continue	after essentially unlimited trouble has	 been  encoun-
	       tered.

       Inconsistencies checked are as follows:

       1.   Blocks claimed by more than	one inode or the free map.
       2.   Blocks claimed by an inode outside the range of the	file system.
       3.   Incorrect link counts.
       4.   Size checks:
		  Directory size not a multiple	of DIRBLKSIZ.
		  Partially truncated file.
       5.   Bad	inode format.
       6.   Blocks not accounted for anywhere.
       7.   Directory checks:
		  File pointing	to unallocated inode.
		  Inode	number out of range.
		  Directories with unallocated blocks (holes).
		  Dot  or  dot-dot not the first two entries of	a directory or
		  having the wrong inode number.
       8.   Super Block	checks:
		  More blocks for inodes than there are	in the file system.
		  Bad free block map format.
		  Total	free block and/or free inode count incorrect.

       Orphaned	files and directories (allocated but unreferenced)  are,  with
       the   operator's	 concurrence,  reconnected  by	placing	 them  in  the
       lost+found directory.  The name assigned	is the inode number.   If  the
       lost+found directory does not exist, it is created.  If there is	insuf-
       ficient space its size is increased.

FILES
       /etc/fstab  contains default list of file systems to check.

EXIT STATUS
       The fsck_ffs utility exits 0 on success,	and >0 if an error occurs.

       If the option -F	is used, fsck_ffs exits	7 if the file system is	clean.

DIAGNOSTICS
       The diagnostics produced	by fsck_ffs are	fully enumerated and explained
       in Appendix A of	Fsck - The UNIX	File System Check Program.

SEE ALSO
       fs(5), fstab(5),	fsck(8), fsdb(8), newfs(8), reboot(8)

FreeBSD	8.1		       January 25, 2009			   FSCK_FFS(8)

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