I don't want to hi-jack this but I may have a clew for you. I am
troubleshooting a similar problem and have found a trail. I recently installed
centos7 on my (improperly complicated system) and sometimes it will boot and
sometimes not. My problem is apparently caused by having three hard drives
On Mon, 2014-12-01 at 18:50 +, Ned Slider wrote:
On 01/12/14 18:36, Gregory P. Ennis wrote:
On Thu, 2014-11-27 at 22:04 -0600, Gregory P. Ennis wrote:
On Thu, 2014-11-27 at 18:50 -0600, Gregory P. Ennis wrote:
Date: Sun, 23 Nov 2014 13:50:17 -0600
On Sun, 23 Nov 2014 13:07:47 -0600
On Tue, 2014-12-02 at 12:34 -0600, Gregory P. Ennis wrote:
On Mon, 2014-12-01 at 18:50 +, Ned Slider wrote:
On 01/12/14 18:36, Gregory P. Ennis wrote:
On Thu, 2014-11-27 at 22:04 -0600, Gregory P. Ennis wrote:
On Thu, 2014-11-27 at 18:50 -0600, Gregory P. Ennis wrote:
Date: Sun, 23
On 02/12/14 18:34, Gregory P. Ennis wrote:
On Mon, 2014-12-01 at 18:50 +, Ned Slider wrote:
On 01/12/14 18:36, Gregory P. Ennis wrote:
On Thu, 2014-11-27 at 22:04 -0600, Gregory P. Ennis wrote:
On Thu, 2014-11-27 at 18:50 -0600, Gregory P. Ennis wrote:
Date: Sun, 23 Nov 2014 13:50:17
On Tue, 2014-12-02 at 16:32 -0600, Gregory P. Ennis wrote:
On Tue, 2014-12-02 at 20:23 +, Ned Slider wrote:
On 02/12/14 18:34, Gregory P. Ennis wrote:
On Mon, 2014-12-01 at 18:50 +, Ned Slider wrote:
On 01/12/14 18:36, Gregory P. Ennis wrote:
On Thu, 2014-11-27 at 22:04 -0600,
On Thu, 2014-11-27 at 22:04 -0600, Gregory P. Ennis wrote:
On Thu, 2014-11-27 at 18:50 -0600, Gregory P. Ennis wrote:
Date: Sun, 23 Nov 2014 13:50:17 -0600
On Sun, 23 Nov 2014 13:07:47 -0600
Gregory P. Ennis wrote:
I also changed the boot level to 5.
Do you mean the runlevel?
On 01/12/14 18:36, Gregory P. Ennis wrote:
On Thu, 2014-11-27 at 22:04 -0600, Gregory P. Ennis wrote:
On Thu, 2014-11-27 at 18:50 -0600, Gregory P. Ennis wrote:
Date: Sun, 23 Nov 2014 13:50:17 -0600
On Sun, 23 Nov 2014 13:07:47 -0600
Gregory P. Ennis wrote:
I also changed the boot level to
On Mon, 01 Dec 2014 18:50:42 +
Ned Slider wrote:
So the system will perform a cold reboot, but not a warm reboot. Sounds
like a hardware issue to me.
I had a computer that did that a few years ago. It would reboot about every
third time you started it up, otherwise it would hang.
Didn't
On Mon, Dec 1, 2014 at 12:59 PM, Frank Cox thea...@melvilletheatre.com wrote:
On Mon, 01 Dec 2014 18:50:42 +
Ned Slider wrote:
So the system will perform a cold reboot, but not a warm reboot. Sounds
like a hardware issue to me.
I had a computer that did that a few years ago. It would
Date: Sun, 23 Nov 2014 13:50:17 -0600
On Sun, 23 Nov 2014 13:07:47 -0600
Gregory P. Ennis wrote:
I also changed the boot level to 5.
Do you mean the runlevel? If so, are you sure that you changed it correctly?
Centos 7 doesn't use runlevels set in inittab like previous versions did. I
see
On Thu, 2014-11-27 at 18:50 -0600, Gregory P. Ennis wrote:
Date: Sun, 23 Nov 2014 13:50:17 -0600
On Sun, 23 Nov 2014 13:07:47 -0600
Gregory P. Ennis wrote:
I also changed the boot level to 5.
Do you mean the runlevel? If so, are you sure that you changed it correctly?
Centos 7
On Sun, November 23, 2014 15:15, Frank Cox wrote:
What is the equivalent of runlevel 1 on Centos 7 and how do you get there?
systemctl isolate runlevel1.target
See https://fedoraproject.org/wiki/SysVinit_to_Systemd_Cheatsheet
--
*** E-Mail is NOT a SECURE channel ***
Everyone,
I have installed Centos 7.0 on my homework machine in order to take a
test drive with it, and am low on the learning curve with it at this
point. I have a small Gateway SX2855-UB12P.
I have a critical hurdle in that when I try a reboot or when I do a
'shutdown now -r' command the
Everyone,
I have installed Centos 7.0 on my homework machine in order to take a
test drive with it, and am low on the learning curve with it at this
point. I have a small Gateway SX2855-UB12P.
I have a critical hurdle in that when I try a reboot or when I do a
'shutdown now -r' command the
On Sun, 23 Nov 2014 13:07:47 -0600
Gregory P. Ennis wrote:
I also changed the boot level to 5.
Do you mean the runlevel? If so, are you sure that you changed it correctly?
Centos 7 doesn't use runlevels set in inittab like previous versions did. I
see that fact is actually noted in
On 11/23/2014 10:58 AM, Gregory P. Ennis wrote:
Everyone,
I have installed Centos 7.0 on my homework machine in order to take a
test drive with it, and am low on the learning curve with it at this
point. I have a small Gateway SX2855-UB12P.
I have a critical hurdle in that when I try a
On Sun, 23 Nov 2014 12:02:17 -0800
Edward M wrote:
Centos 7 runs systemd
This actually bring up an interesting question that I've not yet seen an answer
to:
What is the equivalent of runlevel 1 on Centos 7 and how do you get there?
--
MELVILLE THEATRE ~ Real D 3D Digital Cinema ~
On 11/23/2014 12:02 PM, Edward M wrote:
On 11/23/2014 10:58 AM, Gregory P. Ennis wrote:
Everyone,
I have installed Centos 7.0 on my homework machine in order to take a
test drive with it, and am low on the learning curve with it at this
point. I have a small Gateway SX2855-UB12P.
I
if you look in /lib/systemd/system
runlevel1.target is a link to rescue.target
I think the command is
systemctl isolate rescue.target
(or runlevel1.target if you prefer)
On Sun, Nov 23, 2014 at 3:15 PM, Frank Cox thea...@melvilletheatre.com
wrote:
On Sun, 23 Nov 2014 12:02:17 -0800
On Sun, 23 Nov 2014 15:46:59 -0500
Tony Schreiner wrote:
if you look in /lib/systemd/system
runlevel1.target is a link to rescue.target
I think the command is
systemctl isolate rescue.target
(or runlevel1.target if you prefer)
How would you get there from the grub commandline?
--
haven't actually done it but I'm pretty sure you can still add 1 to the
grub2 vmlinuz line
documentation also suggests
systemd.unit=rescue.target
On Sun, Nov 23, 2014 at 3:53 PM, Frank Cox thea...@melvilletheatre.com
wrote:
On Sun, 23 Nov 2014 15:46:59 -0500
Tony Schreiner wrote:
if you
On Sun, 23 Nov 2014 14:53:14 -0600
Frank Cox wrote:
How would you get there from the grub commandline?
And three seconds after writing that, I found this:
Try passing these arguments on the kernel command line via GRUB :
systemd.unit=multi-user.target
systemd.unit=emergency.target
From here:
On 11/23/2014 01:01 PM, Frank Cox wrote:
On Sun, 23 Nov 2014 14:53:14 -0600
Frank Cox wrote:
How would you get there from the grub commandline?
And three seconds after writing that, I found this:
Try passing these arguments on the kernel command line via GRUB :
systemd.unit=multi-user.target
On 11/23/2014 12:20 PM, Thomas Eriksson wrote:
On 11/23/2014 12:02 PM, Edward M wrote:
On 11/23/2014 10:58 AM, Gregory P. Ennis wrote:
Everyone,
I have installed Centos 7.0 on my homework machine in order to take a
test drive with it, and am low on the learning curve with it at this
point.
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