Ali Hussnain Shah wrote: > i have switched successfully from debian to fedora2-x86_64 . afterwards > i have updated my distro kernel from 2.6.5-1.358 to 2.6.8-1.521 with > redhat update manager. Now whenever i boot with 2.6.8 the kernel boots > root ext3 filesystem as ext2 I asked: > How do you know it's being mounted as ext2? and Hussnain replied: > first, because doing automount in booting process there is a warning > that mount was not successfull with ext3. Could we *see* the warning, please? Out of interest, when you switched, did you reformat all your filesystems? As if not, then it's possible that you've just not converted. In that case, take a *good* backup, use the rescue CD, and use tune2fs -j on the unmounted filesystem. > secondly, i have learnt from > this list that ext3 has only one additional kind of table compared with > ext2 .. so they a ext2 driver could read ext3 too. This is true. It's possible to mount ext3 filesystems as ext2. But I'm still not convinced that this is happening. > third, i X was started successfully. I don't follow you. How does that prove anything (other than that X is working)? I had commented: > Note that there are two root filesystems: one for the early bootup > environment (populated from the initrd file). That one *is* mounted as > ext2, since it isn't supposed to be changed: its contents will be thrown > away and recreated at next boot from the initrd file. > > What does the output of mount tell you? This really would be helpful... James. -- E-mail address: james | "Minis on the other hand are just the wrong size. Too @westexe.demon.co.uk | small to work on directly and too large to put | upside down on the workbench." | -- stevo at madcelt.org