FSCK_HFS(8) | System Manager's Manual | FSCK_HFS(8) |
NAME¶
fsck.hfs
—
SYNOPSIS¶
fsck.hfs |
-q [-df ]
special ... |
fsck.hfs |
-p [-df ]
special ... |
fsck.hfs |
[-n | -y |
-r ] [-dfgl ]
[-m mode]
[-c size]
special ... |
DESCRIPTION¶
Thefsck.hfs
utility verifies and repairs standard HFS
and HFS+ file systems.
The first form of fsck.hfs
quickly checks
the specified file systems to determine whether they were cleanly
unmounted.
The second form of fsck.hfs
preens the
specified file systems. It is normally started by fsck(8)
during systen boot, when a HFS file system is detected. When preening file
systems, fsck.hfs
will fix common inconsistencies
for file systems that were not unmounted cleanly. If more serious problems
are found, fsck.hfs
does not try to fix them,
indicates that it was not successful, and exits.
The third form of fsck.hfs
checks the
specified file systems and tries to repair all detected inconsistencies.
If no options are specified fsck.hfs
will
always check and attempt to fix the specified file systems.
The options are as follows:
-c
size- Specify the size of the cache used by
fsck.hfs
internally. Bigger size can result in better performance but can result in deadlock when used with-l
option. Size can be specified as a decimal, octal, or hexadecimal number. If the number ends with a ``k'', ``m'', or ``g'', the number is multiplied by 1024 (1K), 1048576 (1M), or 1073741824 (1G), respectively. -d
- Display debugging information. This option may provide useful information
when
fsck.hfs
cannot repair a damaged file system. -f
- When used with the
-p
option, forcefsck.hfs
to check `clean' file systems, otherwise it means forcefsck.hfs
to check and repair journaled HFS+ file systems. -g
- Causes
fsck.hfs
to generate its output strings in GUI format. This option is used when another application with a graphical user interface (like Mac OS X Disk Utility) is invoking thefsck.hfs
tool. -l
- Lock down the file system and perform a test-only check. This makes it possible to check a file system that is currently mounted, although no repairs can be made.
-m
mode- Mode is an octal number that will be used to set the permissions for the
lost+found directory when it is created. The lost+found directory is only
created when a volume is repaired and orphaned files or directories are
detected.
fsck.hfs
places orphaned files and directories into the lost+found directory (located at the root of the volume). The default mode is 01777. -p
- Preen the specified file systems.
-q
- Causes
fsck.hfs
to quickly check whether the volume was unmounted cleanly. If the volume was unmounted cleanly, then the exit status is 0. If the volume was not unmounted cleanly, then the exit status will be non-zero. In either case, a message is printed to standard output describing whether the volume was clean or dirty. -y
- Always attempt to repair any damage that is found.
-n
- Never attempt to repair any damage that is found.
-r
- Rebuild the catalog file on the specified file system. This option currently will only work if there is enough contiguous space on the specified file system for a new catalog file and if there is no damage to the leaf nodes in the existing catalog file.
SEE ALSO¶
fsck(8)BUGS¶
fsck.hfs
is not able to fix some inconsistencies that it
detects.
HISTORY¶
Thefsck.hfs
command appeared in Mac OS X Server 1.0 .
November 21, 2002 | Mac OS X |