Greg Surbey <[email protected]> wrote:
> <covici <at> ccs.covici.com> writes:
>
> >
> > Hi folks. I wanted to switch to using genkernel-next instead of
> > genkernel so eventually I could switch to using systemd. However
> > genkernel-next-50 will not mount my /usr file system. I have everything
> > on lvm volumes, except my /boot which is a regular partition. With the
> > regular genkernel /usr is mounted, but I can't even test systemd
> > bedcause it looks for realinit before /usr is even mounted. My
> > genkernel command line is:
> > genkernel --no-clean --no-splash --lvm --e2fsprogs
> > --kerneldir=/usr/src/linux-3.6.2-gentoo initramfs
> >
> > Now when I use genkernel-next, it would not mount /usr because it said
> > no such file or directory -- I guess its mount point -- not sure of
> > that. It would not execute udev because it said there was a missing
> > library.
> >
> > So, how can this be fixed? Is there a bug in genkernel-next?
> >
> > Thanks in advance for any ideas.
>
>
> Hi Covici,
>
> I experienced a similar issue to yours and I thought I'd post a workaround
> that worked for my situation. What I did was add 'debug' as a kernel line
> parameter so that the initramfs would drop me into a busybox commandline
> before mounting the root file system. I then went into /dev/vg/ and ran
> this command 'ln -sf /dev/dm-0 usr'. This changed the symbolic link from a
> relative to an absolute path and thus fixed it so the mount command would
> work correctly when called in the bootup script. I typed 'exit' to continue
> with the boot.
That is interesting, if true, there is a bug in genkernel-next -- I
wonder if they fixed it in 53 -- I was using -50.
Thanks for the hint.
--
Your life is like a penny. You're going to lose it. The question is:
How do
you spend it?
John Covici
[email protected]