1) Just rebooting when fsck fails is ... going to fail again. That's not useful. 2) If it fails to the point when you get a shell, forcing a fsck won't work - it dies because -y doesn't work.
Which leaves dropping to a shell, which is what we do.
1) Just rebooting when fsck fails is ... going to fail again. That's not useful.
2) If it fails to the point when you get a shell, forcing a fsck won't work - it dies because -y doesn't work.
Which leaves dropping to a shell, which is what we do.