I get the message right after the boot sequence declares the / drive
clean. The subject message repeats 3 times then the system boot stops.
It still responds to the keyboard but there is no system to log into.
When I go into the system in a chroot after booting with systemrescue,
I find that journalctl simply reports the systemrescue messages. Do I
have to do something special to get the chroot system's messages?
Maybe I need another cup of coffee to jumpstart my brain, but I'm at a
bit of a loss as to how to get my system back up. :(
Any advice?
Thanks.
On 2025-02-01 09:29, gary@extremeground.com wrote:
BTW: the same happens with the previous kernel. Also, this is a
Debian/Buster server running on AMD64 hardware. I've fsck'd the partition
and it's fine.
I rebooted today after installing the latest updates - which included a new linux-image.
I get the message right after the boot sequence declares the / drive
clean. The subject message repeats 3 times then the system boot stops.
It still responds to the keyboard but there is no system to log into.
When I go into the system in a chroot after booting with systemrescue,
I find that journalctl simply reports the systemrescue messages. Do I
have to do something special to get the chroot system's messages?
Maybe I need another cup of coffee to jumpstart my brain, but I'm at a
bit of a loss as to how to get my system back up. :(
Any advice?
Thanks.
On Sat, Feb 01, 2025 at 10:07:49AM -0700, gary@extremeground.com wrote:
On 2025-02-01 09:29, gary@extremeground.com wrote:Do you mean Buster ie Debian 10 ?
BTW: the same happens with the previous kernel. Also, this is a
Debian/Buster server running on AMD64 hardware. I've fsck'd the partition
and it's fine.
I rebooted today after installing the latest updates - which included a new >> linux-image.
When you say systemrescue - do you mean a systemrescue live image that is
not from Debian for example the one from https://www.system-rescue.org/ ?
I'd suggest maybe using a Debian netinst image in rescue mode and
chroot-ing into the target partition, perhaps or using a Debian live
image to access the filesystem.
All the very best, as ever,
Andrew Cater
(amacater@debian.org)
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