Hello Jordi, Jordi Pujol: > I have found that in the booting process, > the root filesystem, that is mounted usign aufs, can not be modified, > It not works well until the system init procedure has been completed. ::: > + mount -n -t squashfs -o ro,noatime > /lnet/image/LneTPers64/00filesystem.squashfs /lnet/00filesystem.squashfs
Just to make sure, is /lnet/00filesystem.squashfs accessible after this line? Is the 'loop' option unnecessary? > + mount -n -t aufs -o > nodev,noatime,nowarn_perm,xino=/lnet/xino/.aufs.xino,br:/lnet/cow=rw:/lnet/90pcjordi.squashfs=rr:/lnet/12firmwarert.squashfs=rr:/lnet/10tws.squashfs=rr:/lnet/00filesystem.squashfs=rr: > > aufs /root > + mkdir -p /root/lnet > + mount -n -o move /lnet /root/lnet > > Then, stopping the system startup here, and accessing the busybox command What is the fs-type of /lnet, /lnet/xino and /lnet/cow? Are they all in a single tmpfs or something? And what does /lnet contain? If it contains some shared libraries and the next command requires them, then the command may become un-runnable. J. R. Okajima ------------------------------------------------------------------------------