On 01/06/2015 06:57 AM, Joe wrote: > On Tue, 06 Jan 2015 13:42:43 +0000 > Eduardo M KALINOWSKI <edua...@kalinowski.com.br> wrote: > >> On Ter, 06 Jan 2015, Joe wrote: >>> The main issue is that anything local mounted in /etc/fstab (even >>> removable drives) will be treated as essential, and if they are not >>> there, boot will fail. The answer is either to remove any such >>> drives from fstab, as the kernel automounting should be good enough >>> now to do the job consistently, or to mark them as not being >>> required for boot. >> >> This is already noted in the release notes. >> > > Yes, but I believe it is likely to be the main reason for a possible > lack of booting, about which the OP was concerned. I was making the > point that is a very simple thing to avoid. >
I very recently updated two systems from wheezy to jessie. Both are running fine (I'm using one right now), but I had exactly the problem above on one system. I had an fstab entry that halted booting. Removed that line and it booted fine. The only other issue I've had since the upgrade is a wireless driver (which I didn't want) was failing to load and my logs filled up 89G of space telling me over and over in messages, syslog and kern.log until the root partition was full. -Thom -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-user-requ...@lists.debian.org with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact listmas...@lists.debian.org Archive: https://lists.debian.org/54ac0450.5070...@cagroups.com