Just for the hack of it, I tried startx and the system hangs. So it seems to me that it is server issues. Is that possible to look at server logs? Where are they located?
berenger.mo...@neutralite.org wrote: > > >Le 15.12.2014 14:00, Frederic Marchal a écrit : >> On Monday 15 December 2014 15:48:40 German wrote: >>> Oh OK, there really is such a disk. Unfortunately I can't remove it. >>> My >>> machine was running smoothly for about two months and after kernel >>> update >>> this thing happened. >> >> Is sdb supposed to contain a valid partition? >> >> If it is supposed to be a valid disk, then, I would say it is now >> corrupted… >> >> How frequently do you reboot your computer? If you reboot it >> infrequently and >> just rebooted it after the kernel update, then the disk failure may >> have been >> noticed only then. >> >> As the kernel driver handling that disk is a generic scsi, I doubt a >> kernel >> bug affects your system. >> >> The ata driver can't be blamed here either as it is recognizing sda >> just fine. >> >> Now, something else may be holding the boot sequence for 26 seconds >> just >> before mounting the swap partition on sda3 but you ruled out a >> corruption on >> sda2. And we lack evidences that any other peripheral is behaving >> strangely. >> >> Frederic > >Well I had similar... lag... in testing, since few months, because of >dbus. Several other people had it, too. It could be an update of udev >which introduced it. > > >-- >To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-user-requ...@lists.debian.org >with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact listmas...@lists.debian.org >Archive: >https://lists.debian.org/c29b48063c885f15dc5a0863b5a44...@neutralite.org >