Hi Brett,
I had a similar experience some time ago, resulting in the message "init: no processes..." like you. In my case it was a stupid installation process, that left /etc/inittab empty :(
To investigate and solve the problem, I booted from a Knoppix CD, mounted the file systems on the hd and began my search, slowly finding the causes and resolving one after the other. At first I copied an /etc/inittab with content over the empty one and edited the new one to fit my needs.
You should look for your version of modprobe, etc. This is because a 2.6.x kernel needs other versions of modprobe, etc. as a 2.4.x kernel and these versions (and modules) are incompatible (see <path_to_your_kernel_sources>/Documentation/Changes for details about the required versions). I had this problem on one of my boxes and the reason was exactly that. So maybe your version is now wrong for your kernel.
On the other side I upgraded two other boxes without any problem, so I don't know why this sometimes happens. As far as I can see is upgrading sometimes not as easy as desirable, but installing from CD or over the net works fine. My experiences.
Have a nice time and good luck,
Joerg
Brett George schrieb:
Hi,
I've upgraded to testing after using the stable debian version for a few months. Following the instructions at: http://www.debian.org/doc/manuals/reference/ch-woody.en.html
I changed /etc/apt/sources.list "stable" lines to "testing" and then ran:
apt-get update apt-get -t testing dist-upgrade
After a little fooling around with the upgrades process, I was successful (no errors) and rebooted the machine (calling reboot). I then encounted the "LI" message from LILO. I found a CD runnable version of linux on the web (LNX-BBC) and from its boot: prompt, called root=/dev/hda1
That began the boot process, and I recognised some of the things that it was calling (smb mounts etc..), the problem is that it's printing the line:
modprobe: modprobe: Cant open dependencies file lib/modules/2.4.19-xfs/modules.dep (No such file or directory)
hundreds of times, eventually stopping at "INIT: no more processes left in this run level.".
Presumably, the upgrade to testing has upgraded the kernel as well. I didn't run LILO which caused the "LI" error, but now there is a problem with the modules for that new version of the kernel.
Is this a problem with the kernel upgrade process? Did I do something else wrong, or forget to do something? Did the kernel upgrade rename my previous kernel so I can use that to boot up?
What can I do now to get this machine to work - I really need it and am stuck!?!?!?
Thanks in advance, Brett.
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