This install is about 6 months old i think.

On Wed, Mar 29, 2017 at 9:21 AM, John Paul Adrian Glaubitz <
[email protected]> wrote:

> Was that system recently installed?
>
> If the installation is older, you don't have a merged /usr yet as this is
> an option to debootstrap which is run during installation.
>
> Adrian
>
> On Mar 29, 2017, at 9:14 AM, Kevin Stabel <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> From my system:
> root@Noise ~# which mount
> /bin/mount
>
>
> On Wed, Mar 29, 2017 at 8:59 AM, John Paul Adrian Glaubitz <
> [email protected]> wrote:
>
>> His problem could be the separate /usr partition which is no longer
>> supported on modern Linux distributions because of the usr-merge. See his
>> attached fstab.
>>
>> I'm not sure whether the mount command has been moved to /usr/bin yet
>> though. If yes, this could explain the problem.
>>
>> Adrian
>>
>> On Mar 29, 2017, at 8:52 AM, Kevin Stabel <[email protected]> wrote:
>>
>> Hi Jesse,
>>
>> Wrong fs type in fstab?  Is it ext3?
>> Wrong label in fstab?  Try replacing the UUID=etc etc with /dev/sda1
>>
>> On Wed, Mar 29, 2017 at 2:35 AM, Jesse Talavera-Greenberg <
>> [email protected]> wrote:
>>
>>>
>>> On 03/28/2017 05:30 AM, Jesse Talavera-Greenberg wrote:
>>>
>>> However, the /boot partition (which uses ext3) is failing to mount
>>>
>>> How does that manifest? What error message do you get? What are the contents
>>> of your /etc/fstab?
>>>
>>> Attached to this e-mail.  And the error's manifestation appeared in the
>>> logs I posted in my previous e-mail.  Specifically this part:
>>>
>>> Mar 27 22:39:23 motherfscker systemd[1]: Mounting /boot...
>>> Mar 27 22:39:23 motherfscker systemd[1]: var.mount: Directory /var to mount 
>>> over is not empty, mounting anyway.
>>> Mar 27 22:39:23 motherfscker systemd[1]: Mounting /var...
>>> Mar 27 22:39:23 motherfscker kernel: des_sparc64: sparc64 des opcodes not 
>>> available.
>>> Mar 27 22:39:23 motherfscker kernel: md5_sparc64: sparc64 md5 opcode not 
>>> available.
>>> Mar 27 22:39:23 motherfscker kernel: aes_sparc64: sparc64 aes opcodes not 
>>> available.
>>> Mar 27 22:39:23 motherfscker systemd[1]: boot.mount: Mount process exited, 
>>> code=exited status=32
>>> Mar 27 22:39:23 motherfscker systemd[1]: Failed to mount /boot.
>>> Mar 27 22:39:23 motherfscker systemd[1]: Dependency failed for Local File 
>>> Systems.
>>>
>>> and I don't know why.  The weird thing is that I can mount it manually just 
>>> fine,
>>>
>>> How do you mount it manually? Have you compared it to what's in /etc/fstab?
>>>
>>> I mount it through `mount /dev/sda1 /boot`.  That's about it.
>>>
>>> though if I run systemctl default the console stops responding.
>>>
>>> Did you actually read the manpage for systemctl to understand what 
>>> "systemctl
>>> default" does?
>>>
>>> Quoting:
>>>
>>>        default
>>>            Enter default mode. This is mostly equivalent to isolate 
>>> default.target.
>>> and:
>>>     "isolate" is only valid for start operations and causes all other units 
>>> to
>>>     be stopped when the specified unit is started. This mode is always used 
>>> when
>>>     the isolate command is used.
>>>
>>> So, "systemctl default" on Debian effectively kills all units except for 
>>> the ones
>>> that are wanted by default.target. Don't run "systemctl default".
>>>
>>> Probably the default.target should be reconfigured in Debian's systemd 
>>> package
>>> to avoid this problem.
>>>
>>> I don't understand what this means, can you elaborate?  (I don't know
>>> very much about configuring Debian.)
>>>
>>> That being said, after I manually mounted /boot I was able to SSH into
>>> the machine like nothing ever happened; it seems like the default Linux
>>> login prompt just wasn't showing up.  I think there's a boot parameter to
>>> that effect?  Now I'm confused.
>>>
>>
>>
>

Reply via email to