Schmidt, Florian wrote:
-----Urspr�ngliche Nachricht-----
Von: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Im
Auftrag von John Summerfield
Gesendet: Dienstag, 29. Juli 2008 16:23
An: Red Hat Enterprise Linux 5 (Tikanga) discussion mailing-list
Betreff: Re: AW: AW: [rhelv5-list] RAMDISK : ran outof compressed
datainvalidcompressed format (err=1)

Schmidt, Florian wrote:

So I will now try your advice. What steps are neccesary to check the filesystem
on that device?

That depends:-)

I'll boot into rescue mode and then I have 3 possibilities:
Skip
Readonly
This is good. This will sort out LVM and such. It's not something I do
manually often enough to coach someone else over the 'net.

I don't have LVM enabled :)

When you get to the commandline, several commands will show you what's
mounted.

Normal=readwrite?
Which possibility should I choose?
I always chose readwrite, but with this one fsck went wrong!
Of course. You can't fsck a file that's mounted rw.

Well, he asks for mounting my /-partition. I have /boot on another partition. 
So it should be possible to fsck it.

I do not know exactly what I did different, but now I was able to fsck the /boot ->filesystem was fine.

But I didn' chroot in. May that have been the failure?
I thought I said to fsck before chroot.

Yes, you did, but this were the steps I did before reading your mail :)
The steps are
fsck
mount -o remount,rw ...
chroot
What I said.



I would then mount the system rw (still running the CD), chroot in, then
rebuilt the initrd.

This is what I just did. Before that I tried to extract the old initrd. This 
failed with errors, because of sudden end of file. Sounds as if we slowly come 
closer to the problem ;)

That's what the original kernel message said.


So I created a new initrd with mkinitrd and once again tried to extract this. 
Same problem. I'm now trying to find a way to copy the initrd from the good 
machine to the broken one.

Did you follow my advice (below) on how to find the correct command to use? if not, then what do you expect?:-)




OK, i'll even try this one.

Thanks for any advice.

Time is running out :(
Let it. Panic, and it's all over.

Don't overlook the possibility you have a hardware problem.

Yes I already asked the HP guys for a tool to check the raid and the disks, but 
no answer until now.

That's fairly important. Stir them up.



Florian

A command modeled on this will show an adequate command:
rpm -qf /boot/vmlinuz-2.6.9-34.EL --scripts

btw I'm not keen on copying all of /boot from another system. It might
be okay, I just don't know _in your circumstances._




--

Cheers
John

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