Dear Davyd,

Thanks again.

Have a nice weekend.

On 22.02.19 19:13, Davyd McColl wrote:

On 2019/02/22 19:52:57, Tamer Higazi <th9...@googlemail.com> wrote:

Hi David,

you were absolutely RIGHT.
I knew only from the past the Gentoo Installations, where the UUID was
not necessary.

I executed "blkid", took the UUID for the desired to mounted device,
wrote it in the fstab file before I reexecuted grub-mkconfig ....

Thanks for your edvises in the chat and the mailinglist
**you're welcome -- this list has been well helpful to me (and I've learned a lot by following it). I'm quite a fan of the Gentoo userbase -- so helpful! Must
reciprocate when possible (:




best, Tamer


On 19.02.19 05:13, Davyd McColl wrote:
>
>
> On February 19, 2019 00:27:34 Tamer Higazi wrote:
>
>> Hi people,
>> I made a fresh systemd installation based and generated the kernel
>> with genkernel.
>> I am not capable to login after reboot. It is a EFI installation based
>> on systemd
>>
>> I saw in the internet similiar posts, and I am stuck and not getting
>> it solved somehow to login with write access.
>>
>> Has anybody of you an idea what I made wrong?
>>
>> I would kindly thank the gentoo community supporting me solving this
>> issue.
>>
>> grub options:
>> https://pastebin.com/raw/hEaP5Mv0
>>
>> genkernel linux config
>> https://pastebin.com/raw/7CSYLfrS
>>
>> gentoo /etc/fstab:
>> https://pastebin.com/raw/zL19iQiZ
> Just curious - how does mount know how to identify your block devices?
> This fstab has no device identifier at the start of each line (eg
> /dev/sda7, as mentioned in a comment above the line for root, or,
> better, UUID= identifiers, as suggested in the higher up commentary).
> I don't run systemd (so I'm not sure if it does something magick
> here?), but I wouldn't expect this fstab to work on any of the systems
> I've used.
>>
>> grub.cfg file:
>> https://pastebin.com/7KxJCp9F
>>
>>
>> Thank you.
>>
>>
>>
>>
>> best, Tamer
>>
>
>
>


Reply via email to