After fresh installation, reboot ext4 filesystem date incorrect.
Affects | Status | Importance | Assigned to | Milestone | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
ubiquity (Ubuntu) |
Expired
|
Undecided
|
Unassigned |
Bug Description
Binary package hint: ubiquity
I just reinstalled my system, deleting the previous partitions. I choose ext4 as the root filesystem type. Upon reboot I was dropped an emergency shell (busybox) and given a warning that the previous mount timestamp on my new root partition was in the future. Ran "fsck.ext4 /dev/sda3" to fix.
Nothing really bad seemed to happen, system works fine, but I'm thinking this would scare / confuse inexperienced users.
I have four partitions:
/dev/sda1 - Windows 7 loader partition (100MB)
/dev/sda2 - Windows 7 C: (209GB)
/dev/sda3 - Ubuntu 9.10 alpha 6 (15GB)
/dev/sda4 - swap (2GB)
Language setting / locale is nl_NL (dutch)
ProblemType: Bug
Architecture: amd64
Date: Fri Sep 18 09:58:00 2009
DistroRelease: Ubuntu 9.10
Package: ubiquity (not installed)
ProcEnviron:
LANG=nl_NL.UTF-8
SHELL=/bin/bash
ProcVersionSign
SourcePackage: ubiquity
Uname: Linux 2.6.31-10-generic x86_64
I am not able to reproduce this, are you?