syno_poweroff_task -d
umount /volume1 (replace this with your volume name)
fsck.ext4 -pvf /dev/md0 (replace this with your dev)
reboot the system after the scan is completed
syno_poweroff_task -d
umount /volume1 (replace this with your volume name)
fsck.ext4 -pvf /dev/md0 (replace this with your dev)
reboot the system after the scan is completed
I tried a lot of instructions and tutorials to do a file system check on a Synology DSM 6 device e.g the DS414.
The first step involves unmounting the partition you want to check e.g. the /volumes/ path before you can file system check it.
All the instructions I found are inaccurate, too old (most are for DSM 4 or 5), do not work or a dangerous. I just could not get the unmounting to work!
Presteps are install ipckg
using instructions found here: https://github.com/basmussen/ds414-boostrap-dsm5
then install the packages less, lsof, mlocate
E.g. the common advice:
syno_poweroff_task -d
shuts down all services including telnet and the web interface etc. but it also shutsdown my ssh server and the webserver making the box completely inaccessible while still powered on -> you need to hard reset the box
the other common advice to just do a
lsof /volumes/
and then kill the PID of the processes using the volume. Problem with this is that most services are watched by the system so if you kill them, they just restart again after a sec.
Get the list of services associated with your volume you want to fs check:
lsof /volumes
Or make the list more clear with:
lsof /volume1/ | sed 1d | cut -d" " -f1 | sort | uniq
e.g.
anvil
ash
cnid_dbd
cut
dovecot
img_backu
log
master
php56-fpm
pickup
postgres
qmgr
s2s_daemo
sed
sh
sort
syno_mail
afpd
cnid
If you are a bit into Linux you can spot/group these services into categories:
php5/httpd/apache2/nginx = searchterms httpd,nginx
postgres = searchterms postgres
dovecot/syno_mail = searchterm mail
...
to generally find services by name use the following syntax
find /usr/syno/etc.defaults/rc.sysv/ | grep -i <service name>
synoservicecfg --status | grep enable | grep -i <service name>
e.g.
find /usr/syno/etc.defaults/rc.sysv/ | grep -i postgres
synoservicecfg --status | grep enable | grep -i nginx
So my approach was to spot a service which sounds promising, stop it and then run
lsof /volume1/ | sed 1d | cut -d" " -f1 | sort | uniq
to see if this service vanishes from the list.
So all in all I found the following services which I had to stop.
/usr/syno/etc.defaults/rc.sysv/pgsql.sh stop
synoservicecfg --stop pkgctl-PHP5.6
synoservicecfg --stop pkgctl-MailServer
synoservicecfg --stop synobackupd
synoservicecfg --stop pkgctl-HyperBackupVault
synoservicecfg --stop pkgctl-synobackupd
synoservicecfg --stop pkgctl-HyperBackup
synoservicecfg --stop pkgctl-HyperBackupVault
synoservicecfg --stop pkgctl-TimeBackup
synoservicecfg --stop s2s_daemon
Since I could not find any service definition file for those I simply killed the processes using good old kill
command, which did not restart luckily within a minute or so.
now the last thing what was still in the list were some user cwd
processes connected, as the /home folder was part of the /volumes1 folder:
sh 8480 Oli cwd DIR 253,1 4096 154796037 /volume1/homes/Oli
sudo 9104 root cwd DIR 253,1 4096 154796037 /volume1/homes/Oli
ash 9105 root cwd DIR 253,1 4096 154796037 /volume1/homes/Oli
lsof 9209 root cwd DIR 253,1 4096 154796037 /volume1/homes/Oli
lsof 9209 root txt REG 253,1 125544 369233175 /opt/sbin/lsof
lsof 9210 root cwd DIR 253,1 4096 154796037 /volume1/homes/Oli
lsof 9210 root txt REG 253,1 125544 369233175 /opt/sbin/lsof
Solution here was to logout your user and login the true root user using sshthen you can finally umount those beasts:
umount /opt
umount /volume1
fsck.ext4 -fv /dev/mapper/vol1-origin
done!
via https://github.com/OliPelz/how-to-fsck-on-synology-dsm6
I just went through this and used this to create a doc, hope it helps
https://github.com/jmiller0/how-to-fsck-on-synology-dsm7