Hi Michael,
great, that was the problem, removed the file, recreated the initramfs, now it
works like a charm.
Thanks a lot for the help.
Patrick
> Am 27.07.2017 um 21:29 schrieb Michael Biebl <bi...@debian.org>:
>
> Am 27.07.2017 um 20:21 schrieb Patrick Flaig:
>> Sure
usernames or groups not present in the
/etc/{passwd,group} files and the system is configured to use a
network-based database like LDAP or NIS then udev may fail at boot time
because users and groups are looked up well before the network has been
initialized.
A possible solution is to configure /etc/n
Oh my fault, 99-default.link is available, I checked the wrong folder.
The file is containing some text, saying that the machine is most likely a
virtualized guest.
> Am 27.07.2017 um 19:28 schrieb Michael Biebl :
>
> Am 27.07.2017 um 18:55 schrieb debian-li...@patschie.de:
>
> Am 27.07.2017 um 18:25 schrieb Michael Biebl :
>
> Am 27.07.2017 um 18:04 schrieb debian-li...@patschie.de:
>> Hi Michael,
>>
>> I forgot to mention that I also recreated the initramfs:
>> after several tries just to update it, I deleted the initramfs and recreated
>> it
Thanks,
confirmed, the initrd doesn’t contain any udev rule files in /etc/udev/rules.d
> Am 27.07.2017 um 18:11 schrieb Greg Wooledge :
>
> On Thu, Jul 27, 2017 at 06:04:49PM +0200, debian-li...@patschie.de wrote:
>> Is there a way to manually check the contents of the
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