Re: [Trisquel-users] Unable to boot
As you say the BusyBox ash terminal does not show fsck as a valid command BUT your advice of running "fsck -y /dev/sda5" worked perfectly. I do appreciate your help. Thank you very much. Ray On Thu, 6 Feb 2020 at 21:36, Ray Brown wrote: > I am away this weekend but will try next week when I get back. Thanks > > On Thu, 6 Feb 2020, 20:36 , wrote: > >> So /dev/sda5 may contain a damaged filesystem, and it might be an >> important >> one. There are some posts on the Internet with problems kind of similar >> to >> yours. Most of them recommend trying to fix the damaged partition, which >> fixed the problem. Did you try running "fsck -y /dev/sda5"? >> However, as far as I can see fsck may not be included in Trisquel's >> version >> of BusyBox. Do you have some Trisquel Live medium like a CD or a USB >> drive? >> If so, you could try using that to fix the damaged filesystem. Insert >> the >> CD/USB, boot into the live environment ("try trisquel without >> installing") >> and run "sudo fsck -y /dev/sda5" in a terminal. >> >
Re: [Trisquel-users] Unable to boot
I am away this weekend but will try next week when I get back. Thanks On Thu, 6 Feb 2020, 20:36 , wrote: > So /dev/sda5 may contain a damaged filesystem, and it might be an > important > one. There are some posts on the Internet with problems kind of similar > to > yours. Most of them recommend trying to fix the damaged partition, which > fixed the problem. Did you try running "fsck -y /dev/sda5"? > However, as far as I can see fsck may not be included in Trisquel's > version > of BusyBox. Do you have some Trisquel Live medium like a CD or a USB > drive? > If so, you could try using that to fix the damaged filesystem. Insert the > CD/USB, boot into the live environment ("try trisquel without > installing") > and run "sudo fsck -y /dev/sda5" in a terminal. >
Re: [Trisquel-users] Unable to boot
Thank you for your prompt reply. My computer is a Lenovo T400 reconditioned from "Ministry of Freedom" with Libreboot and no disk encryption or LVM. The error message when exiting from the Busybox shell is: dev/sda5 contains a file system with errors. Check forced. My visible partitions etc are: /dev/sda5/dev/sda2 /dev/sda1 and /dev/sda On Wed, 5 Feb 2020 at 20:12, wrote: > Could this be a device dependent problem? > One of my installs on an old second hand laptop works fine with the > newest > Trisquel updates. (I don't have access to any other hardware right now) > What kind of device are you using? Is it an X200, like bsharp1157? Does > it > have libreboot installed? > > Further, are any of your usual drives/partitions visible from the busybox > shell, using "ls /dev/sd*" ? > Are there any error messages? Do any errors get printed if you "exit" out > of > the busybox shell? > Are you using disk encryption or LVM? > > I'm asking because with additional information, it might be easier to see > the > connection, expecially if more cases like this show up. >
[Trisquel-users] Unable to boot
I have the same problem as B Sharp, my boot starts OK with the flash screen of Gnu and Tux but then I get a similar Terminal screen: BusyBox v1.22.1 (Ubuntu 1:1.22.0-15ubuntu1.4) built-in shell (ash) Enter 'help' for a list of built-in commands I then get a prompt (initramfs) I suspect an automatic update may have caused the problem (as I did nothing between one login and the next) and I guess if I knew where to look I could modify the offending script. Any help much appreciated. Ray Brown