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    A New Chapter for MagicMirror: The Community Takes the Lead
    Read the statement by Michael Teeuw here.

    Everything was going so well

    Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved Unsolved Troubleshooting
    52 Posts 4 Posters 21.8k Views 3 Watching
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    • S Do not disturb
      sdetweil @JMac
      last edited by sdetweil

      @JMac well mounted means accessible by the filesystem

      so it’s /dev/sda
      the usb installed sd card

      so

      sudo unmount /dev/sda
      and then run fsck on that

      Sam

      How to add modules

      learning how to use browser developers window for css changes

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      • J Offline
        JMac
        last edited by

        so I run the command sudo umount /dev/sda
        and get
        umount: /dev/sda: not mounted.

        so should now go,
        e2fsck -f -v /dev/sda
        not the original
        e2fsck -f -v mmcblk0p2

        ?

        S 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
        • S Do not disturb
          sdetweil @JMac
          last edited by

          @JMac correct… you had to find the disk name

          Sam

          How to add modules

          learning how to use browser developers window for css changes

          J 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
          • J Offline
            JMac @sdetweil
            last edited by

            @sdetweil when i run e2fsck…
            I get
            e2fsck: permission denied while trying to open /dev/sda
            you must have r/w access to the filesystem or be root.

            S 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
            • S Do not disturb
              sdetweil @JMac
              last edited by sdetweil

              @JMac yes, you must use sudo on both commands unmount and fsck

              sorry I was unclear

              normal users should not be able to mess with hardware, so one must act as root

              Sam

              How to add modules

              learning how to use browser developers window for css changes

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              • J Offline
                JMac @sdetweil
                last edited by

                @sdetweil I run sudo umount…
                and get
                umount:… not mounted,

                then run
                sudo e2fsck -f -v /dev/sda
                and get
                e2fsck 1.46.2 (28-feb-2021)
                /dev/sda is in use
                efsck: connot continue, aborting.

                S 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                • S Do not disturb
                  sdetweil @JMac
                  last edited by

                  @JMac hm… wonder what is using it?

                  can you open the disks app on the pi from the dedktop menu

                  Sam

                  How to add modules

                  learning how to use browser developers window for css changes

                  J 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                  • J Offline
                    JMac @sdetweil
                    last edited by

                    @sdetweil on the home screen I have 2 drive icons under the wastebasket.
                    one is boot
                    the other is rootfs

                    i then have the option to eject these in the file manager

                    S 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                    • S Do not disturb
                      sdetweil @JMac
                      last edited by

                      @JMac there should be that drive on /dev/sda too

                      Sam

                      How to add modules

                      learning how to use browser developers window for css changes

                      J 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                      • J Offline
                        JMac @sdetweil
                        last edited by

                        @sdetweil I’m a little confused (I’d imagine thats pretty clear at this point).

                        i run sudo fdisk -1
                        and get
                        Disk /dev/ram0 through to Disk /dev/ram15
                        the list then has
                        Disk/dev/mmcblk0: 7.4GiB (my thinking is this is the current/new sd card)

                        Device
                        /dev/mmcblk0p1
                        /dev/mmcblk0p2

                        Disk /dev/sda:59.69 GiB (I again assume this is the old SD with my original MM setup)

                        Device
                        /dev/sda1
                        /dev/sda/2

                        end of the list.

                        does any of that make sense/ is any of it what I’m looking for? I’ve obviously taken out several lines under each of those headers just for space and time typing.

                        S 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                        • S Do not disturb
                          sdetweil @JMac
                          last edited by

                          @JMac yes sda has two partitions boot and rootfs

                          but you need to run e2fsck on /dev/sda2
                          e2fsck mean extended version 2, file system check

                          Sam

                          How to add modules

                          learning how to use browser developers window for css changes

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                          • J Offline
                            JMac
                            last edited by

                            so should i also run sudo umount /dev/sda2 before running sudo e2fsck -f -v /dev/sda2?

                            S 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                            • S Do not disturb
                              sdetweil @JMac
                              last edited by

                              @JMac yes

                              Sam

                              How to add modules

                              learning how to use browser developers window for css changes

                              J 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                              • J Offline
                                JMac @sdetweil
                                last edited by

                                @sdetweil so I’ve run sudo umount /dev/sda1 and the same for sda2 and both folders have disappeared off the home screen.

                                which e2fsck do I run if i had to unmount 2 drives?

                                S 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                • S Do not disturb
                                  sdetweil @JMac
                                  last edited by

                                  @JMac unmount means remove them from normal file system access

                                  the device names still exist

                                  as e2fsck could modify the file system blocks on the drive, you don’t want to do that while you could still copy a file there

                                  so you are passing the hardware name to e2fsck

                                  Sam

                                  How to add modules

                                  learning how to use browser developers window for css changes

                                  J 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                  • J Offline
                                    JMac @sdetweil
                                    last edited by

                                    @sdetweil so do I run e2fsck -f -v /dev/sda1 or e2fsck -f -v /dev/sda2
                                    or does it not matter?

                                    I’m struggling here to the bigger picture so can’t see the logic of the steps.

                                    S 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                    • S Do not disturb
                                      sdetweil @JMac
                                      last edited by

                                      @JMac ok bigger picture, in Linux

                                      hardware devices are named. see the output of ls /dev

                                      disk devices are usually named sd??? where xxx is a letter, and partition number
                                      letter a is the first device b the second etc

                                      sometime in the past the type of storage device was also used as part of the name, scsi, atapi …
                                      for this case they are named sd (storage device)

                                      sda is the first storage device
                                      sda1 is the first partition on the sda device

                                      on those partitions are a logical way of storing data. most linux and all windows devices store file data in sectors, 512 byte chunks called sectors. and then the file system (way of organizing those sectors)
                                      applies some data structure on top. it’s a directory or a file. tables in other sectors build trees of data to describe the entire partition.

                                      there are different layouts depending on vendor and intended use
                                      FAT, exFAT, NTFS EXT3, EXT4, and a host of others.

                                      all is wonderful until some sector or more gets damaged… machine was powered off during write, a hardware failure…

                                      now the filesystem code is confused… says read sector 853, and the bits there will tell it where the next sector is for this file. but the bits don’t point to the right place… Oops

                                      some file systems include a duplicate set of bits do there is an alternative way . some use them only for recovery.

                                      sd card hardware is known for being fragile. it was designed for lots of reads,with few writes. camera picture music file. NOT an os that is waiting logs and other stuff constantly.

                                      anyhow.
                                      to check and correct these kinds of problems with the Linux ext file system we need to run thr fsck program on the raw partition. and make sure that moone else is using it.

                                      unmount takes it out of circulation. no users files open

                                      fsck and e2fsck need to read the raw sectors on the partition, but we just unmounted it.
                                      so we need to provide the hardware name for the program to use.

                                      Sam

                                      How to add modules

                                      learning how to use browser developers window for css changes

                                      J 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                      • J Offline
                                        JMac @sdetweil
                                        last edited by

                                        @sdetweil Wow, that was a bit to take in but makes sense (I think).

                                        So if I unmount it how do I get the information off it?
                                        what are the steps here?

                                        S 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                        • S Do not disturb
                                          sdetweil @JMac
                                          last edited by sdetweil

                                          @JMac
                                          unmount it
                                          run fsck against it
                                          remount it (hopefully fixed)

                                          then copy your data first thing, DO NOT WRITE TO THE SD CARD

                                          config.js
                                          custom.css
                                          and a list of all the modules in modules (ls *)

                                          if u WANT to try in each module folder do

                                          git remote -v
                                          ```⁷
                                          so we know where it came from
                                          
                                          quickest way in each module folder
                                          
                                          git remote -v | tail -a ~/module_list 
                                          
                                          this will list to github source (git remote -v) and append that info  (tail -a) to a known file in your home folder (~ = home)
                                          
                                          this is what my backup script does
                                          IF you have any modules that require authentication (run an auth script) 
                                          ls *.json while you are there,
                                          
                                          you could also run my backup script, from the web page copy/paste  with -s  pointing to the mounted folder MagicMirror 
                                          https://github.com/sdetweil/MagicMirror-backup-restore
                                          
                                          ...MM_backup -s /media/??????/MagicMirror some gobbleygoop name (tab key will fill it in after the 1st letter)
                                          
                                          this will create the MM_backup folder in your logged on user home folder..  
                                          and do all the work described above (after the mount)
                                          https://github.com/sdetweil/MagicMirror-backup-restore

                                          Sam

                                          How to add modules

                                          learning how to use browser developers window for css changes

                                          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                          • J Offline
                                            JMac
                                            last edited by

                                            had a little crack at this again, the Mrs is bugging me to get “her” mirror back up and running.

                                            So I’ve run sudo umount /dev/sda1
                                            sudo umount /dev/sda2

                                            Both drive folders from the mounted (old) SD disappeared from the home screen on the pi as expected.

                                            then run, (and got)
                                            sudo e2fsck -f -v /dev/sda2
                                            e2fsck 1.46.2 (28-feb-2021)
                                            rootfs: recovering journal
                                            superblock needs_recovery flag is clear but journal has data.
                                            Run journal anyway ? YES
                                            e2fsck: unable to set superblock flags on rootfs

                                            rootfs: *********** WARNING: filesytem still has errors *********

                                            S 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0

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