If we want fast reboot, we can disable the fsck check, although it's not recommended to do so.
To disable fsck, there are a few ways.
1. update /etc/fstab
in /etc/fstab, the last column is used by fsck to determine the order of performing file system check at reboot time. For root file system /, it should be 1, for other file systems, it should be 2. If we want to disable the fsck check for certain file system, we can specify 0 in the last column.
$ grep nofsck /etc/fstab
/dev/sda2 /mnt/nofsck ext4 defaults 0 0
2. use tune2fs to change the filesystem parameters
To list the current settings:
$ tune2fs /dev/sda2 | egrep -i 'mount count|check'
Mount count: 1
Maximum mount count: 21
Last checked: Sat Mar 24 16:15:33 2012
Check interval: 15552000 (6 months)
Next check after: Thu Sep 20 16:15:33 2012
the output is self-explained, for my system, /dev/sda2 will be checked after it's mounted for 21 times, or after Sep 20 16:15:33 2012.
To disable fsck check on /dev/sda2
$ tune2fs -c 0 -i 0 /dev/sda2check it again:
tune2fs 1.41.12 (17-May-2010)
Setting maximal mount count to -1
Setting interval between checks to 0 seconds.
$ tune2fs /dev/sda2 | egrep -i 'mount count|check'
Mount count: 1
Maximum mount count: -1
Last checked: Sat Mar 24 16:15:33 2012
Check interval: 0 (<none>)
3. Tell system to skip fsck when rebooting.
$ /sbin/shutdown -rf now
the -f flags tells system to skip fsck for all filesystems during the reboot. Unlike the fstab and tune2fs methods, it only takes effect during current reboot, will not disable fsck permanently.