4.12. Repairing a File System
When nodes fail with the file system mounted, file-system journaling allows fast recovery. However, if a storage device loses power or is physically disconnected, file-system corruption may occur. (Journaling cannot be used to recover from storage subsystem failures.) When that type of corruption occurs, you can recover the GFS file system by using the
gfs_fsck
command.
The
gfs_fsck
command must only be run on a file system that is unmounted from all nodes.
Note
The
gfs_fsck
command has changed from previous releases of Red Hat GFS in the following ways:
- You can no longer set the interactive mode with Ctrl+C. Pressing Ctrl+C now cancels the
gfs_fsck
command. Do not press Ctrl+C unless you want to cancel the command. - You can increase the level of verbosity by using the
-v
flag. Adding a second-v
flag increases the level again. - You can decrease the level of verbosity by using the
-q
flag. Adding a second-q
flag decreases the level again. - The
-n
option opens a file system as read-only and answersno
to any queries automatically. The option provides a way of trying the command to reveal errors without actually allowing thegfs_fsck
command to take effect.
Refer to the
gfs_fsck
man page, gfs_fsck(8)
, for additional information about other command options.
Usage
gfs_fsck -y BlockDevice
-y
- The
-y
flag causes all questions to be answered withyes
. With the-y
flag specified, thegfs_fsck
command does not prompt you for an answer before making changes. BlockDevice
- Specifies the block device where the GFS file system resides.
Example
In this example, the GFS file system residing on block device
/dev/vg01/lvol0
is repaired. All queries to repair are automatically answered with yes
.
gfs_fsck -y /dev/vg01/lvol0