On Mon, 09 Jun 2014 11:43:33 +1000, Andrew McGlashan  
<[email protected]> wrote:

> Hi Terry,

[snip]

>> I suspect that there must be a file or files, other than /etc/fstab,  
>> that
>> have stuff relating to the old disc, and if this is the case is moving a
>> volume group going to have the same problem?
>
> How about doing this:
>
> blkid -c /dev/null
>
> That will list all the partitions, then change the /etc/fstab with UUID
> entries, then it won't matter which disk the partitions are on.
>

The /etc/fstab has UUID entries.

> You still need to be able to boot, so wherever the boot files are, they
> need to be handled.  You'll probably have a standard MBR type partition
> table too, no GPT to worry about.

I think it boots, as I don't think I would get to the login prompt, but it  
keeps returning to the prompt.
I have checked user:group stuff (/etc/group) and that is the same for both  
discs.

It is all on a new MB, hence the new install to the SSD was GPT and the  
boot was all OK until I copied my old / across. /boot was on a separate  
partition so none of that was monkeyed with on the SSD.
The reason I copied / across, after the new install, is that the updates  
to get to my current setup plus all the additional packages would be  
horrendous.
I did update the kernel on the SSD first, that was necessary to see the  
wired network, and that booted OK.

>
> Hope that helps somewhat at least ;-)

Don't think so :-(
I'll keep searching for clues. The way Google seems to work these days one  
has to be quite enlightened to figure out the right search string to get  
an answer that helps.

Thanks for your help.

Cheers,
-- 
Regards,
Terry Duell
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