On 01/08/14 20:29, Sam Varshavchik wrote:
> Steven P. Ulrick writes:
>
>> On Sat, 4 Jan 2014 19:42:16 -0600
>> Steven Ulrick <meow8...@gmail.com> wrote:
>>
>> > On Saturday, January 4, 2014, Sam Varshavchik <mr...@courier-mta.com>
>> > wrote:
>> > > About ten hours after a reboot, a chance attempt to log in back to
>> > > the
>> > server was rather rudely rejected with a:
>> > >
>> > > System is booting up. See pam_nologin(8)
>> > > Connection closed by 192.168.0.2
>> > >
>> > > A quick run back to the console revealed the existence of a ten
>> > > hour old
>> > /var/run/nologin file as the culprit. Removing it put everything back
>> > in working order.
>> >
>> > Two things:
>> > 1. You are not alone!
>> > 2. Thanks for the workaround...
>>
>> OK...  I guess #2 was a bit premature.  I just had reason to log out of
>> my KDE session.  When I logged back in (or tried to), I was greeted
>> with the dreaded "System is booting up. See pam_nologin(8)"  When my
>> system is in this state, I can get to a console, but it will not let me
>> log in.  I even tried to ssh from another system.  The other system
>> informs me of the following:
>> > > System is booting up. See pam_nologin(8)
>>
>> For clarification, the remote system that I am attempting to ssh FROM
>> is telling me that the system that I am trying to ssh INTO is in the
>> following state:
>> > > System is booting up. See pam_nologin(8)
>>
>> So, it appears that I have no workaround to this issue other than
>> rebooting...
>
> No. According to the documentation, root is allowed to log in. You should be 
> able to ssh as root.
>
> My original working theory was that /run/nologin was not getting cleared by 
> whatever godforsaken systemd service is responsible for removing it, when the 
> boot mostly completes. This was based on my /run/nologin's timestamp, which 
> dated back to my system's boot.
>
> But if that's getting spuriously created, during a normal system state, then 
> something indeed must be creating it, in the wild.
>
> Not going to be easy tracking it down. Perusing journalctl's man page, there 
> doesn't seem to be a way to specify a time interval. Given /run/nologin's 
> timestamp, it should be possible to track down what was started in that 
> timeframe, but I do not see a way to specify a timeframe. Furthermore, 
> journalctl's output seems to consist of merely log messages from 
> systemd-started processes, rather than the actual log of what was started, 
> and when.
>
> So, tell me again how logs kept as binary blobs are superior to plain text 
> files.
>
> I'd start to hit Google, looking for way to find systemd's actual logs, and 
> filtering them by a time interval. Seems silly to have to do that, but 
> systemd is such a winner…


Have a look here to see if their fix may apply to your situation....

https://bugzilla.novell.com/show_bug.cgi?id=811793



-- 
Getting tired of non-Fedora discussions and self-serving posts

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