Create the /etc/init.d/mountfs script by running the following command:
cat > /etc/init.d/mountfs << "EOF" #!/bin/sh # Begin /etc/init.d/mountfs # # Include the functions declared in the /etc/init.d/functions file # source /etc/init.d/functions case "$1" in start) # # Remount the root partition in read-write mode. -n tells mount # not to # write to the /etc/mtab file (because it can't do this. The # root # partition is most likely still mounted in read-only mode # echo -n "Remounting root file system in read-write mode..." /bin/mount -n -o remount,rw / evaluate_retval # # First empty the /etc/mtab file. Then remount root partition # in read-write # mode again but pass -f to mount. This way mount does # everything # except the mount itself. This is needed for it to write to the # mtab # file which contains a list of currently mounted file systems. # echo > /etc/mtab /bin/mount -f -o remount,rw / # # Remove the possible /fastboot and /forcefsck files. they are # only # supposed to be used during the next reboot's checkfs which just # happened. If you want to fastboot or forcefsck again you'll # have to # recreate the files # /bin/rm /fastboot /forcefsck # # Walk through /etc/fstab and mount all file systems that don't # have the noauto option set in the fs_mntops field (the 4th # field. # See man fstab for more info) # echo -n "Mounting other file systems..." /bin/mount -a evaluate_retval ;; stop) # # Deactivate all the swap partitions # echo -n "Deactivating swap..." /sbin/swapoff -a evaluate_retval # # And unmount all the file systems, mounting the root file # system # read-only (all are unmounted but because root can't be # unmounted # at this point mount will automatically mount it read-only # which # is what supposed to happen. This way no data can be written # anymore from disk) # echo -n "Unmounting file systems..." /bin/umount -a -r evaluate_retval ;; *) echo "Usage: $0 {start|stop}" exit 1 ;; esac # End /etc/init.d/mountfs EOF