Stephen P. Molnar composed on 2023-12-05 13:33 (UTC-0500):
> I decided to try something. I logged in to the rescue mode as root and
> entered startx at the prompt. This generated the error:
I believe if xserver-xorg-legacy is not installed that startx failure is
expected.
I keep it installed
Please forgive me if I somehow messed up the quote attribution. There
was a lot of stuff I was able to cull. :)
On 12/5/23, David Christensen wrote:
> On 12/5/23 10:33, Stephen P. Molnar wrote:
> > I decided to try something. I logged in to the rescue mode as root and
> > entered startx at
On 5 Dec 2023 11:05 -0500, from s.mol...@sbcglobal.net (Stephen P. Molnar):
> I have Bookworm installed on a 1TB SSD. When I attempted logging this
> morning I failed! Rather than opening my XFCE desktop I was sent back tot he
> login screen, over and over and . I got the same
On 12/5/23 08:05, Stephen P. Molnar wrote:
I have Bookworm installed on a 1TB SSD. When I attempted logging this
morning I failed! Rather than opening my XFCE desktop I was sent back
tot he login screen, over and over and . I got the same
result attempting to login as root. I
My Os is up to date and running the version XFCE4
I've attached the log files that i could find. I hope that it will help.
On 12/05/2023 02:26 PM, Alexander V. Makartsev wrote:
On 05.12.2023 23:33, Stephen P. Molnar wrote:
I decided to try something. I logged in to the rescue mode as root
Am Dienstag, 5. Dezember 2023, 18:56:48 CET schrieb Stephen P. Molnar:
Not good! You have to start startx from the shell.
However, when you see the login screen (gdm, lightdm, kdm, whatever), that
means, the X-server is running and ok.
So you have a problem with XFCE.
Look at ~/.config/xfce4
On 05.12.2023 23:33, Stephen P. Molnar wrote:
I decided to try something. I logged in to the rescue mode as root
and entered startx at the prompt. This generated the error:
Unable to contact settings server
failed to execute child process "dbus-launch" (No such file or directory)
I vaguely
I decided to try something. I logged in to the rescue mode as root and
entered startx at the prompt. This generated the error:
Unable to contact settings server
failed to execute child process "dbus-launch" (No such file or directory)
On 12/05/2023 01:03 PM, Tom Furie wrote:
"Stephen P.
"Stephen P. Molnar" writes:
> On 12/05/2023 12:47 PM, Tom Furie wrote:
>> "Stephen P. Molnar" writes:
>>
>>> I have Bookworm installed on a 1TB SSD. When I attempted logging this
>>> morning I failed! Rather than opening my XFCE desktop I was sent back
>>> tot he login screen, over and over
I've attached the log. I hope that someone can tell me what the problem is.
Thanks inn advance.
On 12/05/2023 11:59 AM, Joe wrote:
On Tue, 5 Dec 2023 11:05:15 -0500
"Stephen P. Molnar" wrote:
I have Bookworm installed on a 1TB SSD. When I attempted logging this
morning I failed! Rather
Xfce4 graphical login screen
On 12/05/2023 12:47 PM, Tom Furie wrote:
"Stephen P. Molnar" writes:
I have Bookworm installed on a 1TB SSD. When I attempted logging this
morning I failed! Rather than opening my XFCE desktop I was sent back
tot he login screen, over and over and
"Stephen P. Molnar" writes:
> I have Bookworm installed on a 1TB SSD. When I attempted logging this
> morning I failed! Rather than opening my XFCE desktop I was sent back
> tot he login screen, over and over and . I got the
When you say "back to the login screen", do you mean
On Tue, 5 Dec 2023 11:05:15 -0500
"Stephen P. Molnar" wrote:
> I have Bookworm installed on a 1TB SSD. When I attempted logging this
> morning I failed! Rather than opening my XFCE desktop I was sent back
> tot he login screen, over and over and . I got the
> same result
Am Dienstag, 5. Dezember 2023, 17:05:15 CET schrieb Stephen P. Molnar:
To get closer to the cause, I suggest to remove temporaryly any loginmamanger
out of the way Either /usr/bin/xdm, /usr/bin/kdm, /usr/bin/gdm or /usr/bin/
xdm, whatever. Copy it somewhere, i.e. to /root
Then reboot and from
I have Bookworm installed on a 1TB SSD. When I attempted logging this
morning I failed! Rather than opening my XFCE desktop I was sent back
tot he login screen, over and over and . I got the same
result attempting to login as root. I have to assume that grub has been
corrupted>
On 8/10/19 11:19 AM, ghe wrote:
Fixed. I did a few things differently, and it came up:
I verified the NOOBS file with sha256 (match).
I unzipped directly to the SD chip.
I moved the HDMI connector to the one toward the back.
Even though I saw nothing in any dox about it making any difference,
ghe wrote:
> I know this isn't the best place to talk about Raspberry Pis, but there
> are people here who are familiar with them, and probably people who can
> point me to the correct place. And they do run Debian...
I don't have that modern RPI, but usually there are ready images to use. Did
I know this isn't the best place to talk about Raspberry Pis, but there
are people here who are familiar with them, and probably people who can
point me to the correct place. And they do run Debian...
My 2G RPi4 arrived yesterday, and it doesn't boot, not all the way
anyway. The red power led
Le 16/06/2019 à 15:53, Stephen P. Molnar a écrit :
I have just installed a new SSD in my 64 bit Stretch platform.
When I boot the machine I get the following error:
error: file '/boot/grub/i386-pc/normalmod' not found
Entering rescue mode .. . .
grub rescue>_
Pressing Contro-Alt-Delete
In-Reply-To: <5d0649da.40...@sbcglobal.net>
On Sun, 16 Jun 2019, Stephen P. Molnar wrote:
>
> On 06/16/2019 12:16 PM, bw wrote:
> > In-Reply-To: <5d0649da.40...@sbcglobal.net>
> > > Stephen P. Molnar, Ph.D. says...
> > > I have just installed a new SSD in my 64 bit Stretch platform.
> > >
> >
On 6/16/19 6:53 AM, Stephen P. Molnar wrote:
I have just installed a new SSD in my 64 bit Stretch platform.
When I boot the machine I get the following error:
error: file '/boot/grub/i386-pc/normalmod' not found
Entering rescue mode .. . .
grub rescue>_
Pressing Contro-Alt-Delete reboots the
Stephen P. Molnar wrote:
> I have just installed a new SSD in my 64 bit Stretch platform.
what do you mean by "installed"? there is a lot
of difference between plugging it in vs. plugging
it in and putting something on it.
what did you do?
give details. we don't know what you did nor
In-Reply-To: <5d0649da.40...@sbcglobal.net>
>Stephen P. Molnar, Ph.D. says...
>I have just installed a new SSD in my 64 bit Stretch platform.
>
>When I boot the machine I get the following error:
>
>error: file '/boot/grub/i386-pc/normalmod' not found
>Entering rescue mode .. . .
>grub rescue>_
>
I have just installed a new SSD in my 64 bit Stretch platform.
When I boot the machine I get the following error:
error: file '/boot/grub/i386-pc/normalmod' not found
Entering rescue mode .. . .
grub rescue>_
Pressing Contro-Alt-Delete reboots the system. Pressing Delete , or
F-8,during the
Hi,
Okay, it turns out that the only files that were missing were ones that
I had in the /etc/initramfs-tools/root/ directory.
The only files in the faulty initrd image were from the
/etc/initramfs-tools/root/.ssh/ directory, so missing .profile and other
required files.
I modified the
Hi,
After dropbear update as follows:
< ii dropbear 2012.55-1.3
amd64lightweight SSH2 server and client
---
> ii dropbear 2012.55-1.3+deb7u1
amd64lightweight SSH2 server and client
Debian Version 7.11 (Wheezy)
Before
Hi, you can open the Terminal and type:
# grub-install /dev/sda1
And
# update-grub2
This will do what you need.
Em 06-03-2016 03:55, lina escreveu:
> Hi,
>
> After install the debian,
>
> it goes to debian OS system directly, without showing me the option of
> start Mac OS or debian OS.
>
> Any
a menu.
Original Message
From: lina <lina.lastn...@gmail.com>
Sent: Mon Mar 07 01:01:31 AEDT 2016
To: Keith Bainbridge <keithrbaugro...@gmail.com>
Cc: Debian Lists <debian-user@lists.debian.org>
Subject: Re: boot problem
df -h
Filesystem Size Used Avail Us
ina.lastn...@gmail.com>
> Sent: Sun Mar 06 17:55:17 AEDT 2016
> To: Debian Lists <debian-user@lists.debian.org>
> Subject: boot problem
>
> Hi,
>
> After install the debian,
>
> it goes to debian OS system directly, without showing me the option of
> start Mac
lt;debian-user@lists.debian.org>
Subject: boot problem
Hi,
After install the debian,
it goes to debian OS system directly, without showing me the option of
start Mac OS or debian OS.
Any suggestions, thanks,
Keith Bainbridge
0447 667 468
keithrbaugro...@gmail.com
Sent from my APad
Hi,
After install the debian,
it goes to debian OS system directly, without showing me the option of
start Mac OS or debian OS.
Any suggestions, thanks,
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On Mon, Oct 05, 2015 at 11:05:20PM -0600, Glenn English wrote:
[...]
> > Hmmm. Sorry to be so unspecific.
>
> No prob. Everybody's happy now. I just have some data to copy over from the
> old disk. At least it wasn't the hardware...
In any case,
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On Mon, Oct 05, 2015 at 11:53:06AM -0600, Glenn English wrote:
>
> On Oct 5, 2015, at 1:04 AM, to...@tuxteam.de wrote:
>
> > Then try "ssh @localhost".
>
> Works, kinda. It does the same thing to localhost or the hostname, from the
> console or
On Mon, October 5, 2015 12:53 pm, Glenn English wrote:
> It seems to me that there's a networking problem, but
> intermittent and from several directions. I don't understand it at all.
>
> Maybe it's hardware...
Have you had a lightning storm in the area recently? And is everything
connected to
On Oct 5, 2015, at 1:04 AM, to...@tuxteam.de wrote:
> Then try "ssh @localhost".
Works, kinda. It does the same thing to localhost or the hostname, from the
console or from a terminal in XFCE. (I've got SSH running with keys around the
local net(s) (no login required)). The MOTD comes up
Glenn English composed on 2015-10-04 18:14 (UTC-0600):
> I disabled XDM (sure is nice to have text config files) and rebooted. It
> came up at a regular login prompt, and no error messages. startx took a
> *very* long time -- said it couldn't find the hostname (something like
> that) -- but it
On Oct 5, 2015, at 11:53 AM, to...@tuxteam.de wrote:
> Hmm. Weird. I dimly remember that tcpwrappers did something
> similar: to check the host name they sometimes tried a
> reverse host lookup, which took its time when it failed.
I've never seen or heard of anything like this -- the kernel
On Oct 5, 2015, at 12:51 PM, Felix Miata wrote:
> Do you have an entry in /etc/hosts matching your actual IP to the content in
> /etc/hostname when you observe this delay?
Yup. I rely on the host files, so I keep then correct and accurate.
--
Glenn English
On Oct 5, 2015, at 12:45 PM, rlhar...@oplink.net wrote:
> On Mon, October 5, 2015 12:53 pm, Glenn English wrote:
>> Maybe it's hardware...
It wasn't. A new install fixed everything.
> Have you had a lightning storm in the area recently?
Yeah. That's common in Colorado.
> And is everything
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On Sun, Oct 04, 2015 at 06:14:44PM -0600, Glenn English wrote:
> I disabled XDM (sure is nice to have text config files) and rebooted. It came
> up at a regular login prompt, and no error messages. startx took a *very*
> long time -- said it
On Oct 5, 2015, at 1:04 AM, wrote:
> All those 30-ish seconds timeout and the error message you mention
> above smell of something trying to resolve a host name, failing
> and giving up (timeout).
Yup. The timeouts do, anyway. The error messages from the
In reply to Glenn English :
Inasmuch as you are running Xfce, is there any particular reason for
staying with Wheezy, which was the release which introduced the new Gnome?
If not, the investment of two or three hours should have you up and
running in Jessie.
I have had
A few hours ago, my laptop (after booting Wheezy) started saying that it was
trying to load a module for a network interface (CAP_SYS_MODULE) that was
deprecated -- I should use CAP_NET_ADMIN instead.
I'm configuring an old Cicso router using Putty to get to the RS232 port on the
router --
I disabled XDM (sure is nice to have text config files) and rebooted. It came
up at a regular login prompt, and no error messages. startx took a *very* long
time -- said it couldn't find the hostname (something like that) -- but it
eventually started XFCE. And the messages were back.
Something
Hello,
I boot my virtal machines from LVM and one of them has boot problems.
Sometimes it boots fine, but 3 out of 4 times I get systemd messages
about start jobs running. After some timeouts I see:
(1 of 2) A start job is running for Activation of LV... 9s / no limit)
Because everything is on
Hello all,
I've a problem within the initrd, *sometime* it fail to mount the root
directory and after a while it fall back to the shell.
My guess is a timing issue, the ssd disk attach before some process
(udev?) is listening for disk events, but it is only a guess.
I recently added an ssd disk,
On Sat, Nov 09, 2013 at 09:49:57AM -0800, Ray Dillinger wrote:
On 11/09/2013 06:08 AM, didier gaumet wrote:
The machine is an Asus Sabertooth X79 motherboard, IA64 Sandy Bridge
architecture,
[...]
On the Asus website, this is not an IA64 motherboard, but a X86-64
(amd64) one. Trying an
Le 09.11.2013 09:26, Ray Dillinger a écrit :
I have a strange problem where my computer does not recognize *ANY*
boot device
or boot medium other than one single hard drive where a badly
configured debian
linux is installed. I don't think the particulars of that messed-up
install
are relevant,
I have a strange problem where my computer does not recognize *ANY* boot device
or boot medium other than one single hard drive where a badly configured debian
linux is installed. I don't think the particulars of that messed-up install
are relevant, but I've put a note about it at the bottom
Okay, your bios settings are messed up on that computer. You need to go
into bios settings and give them some clues about what's actually on the
computer in terms of hardware. The bios settings on your machine have
lost their mind somehow.
On Sat, 9 Nov 2013, Ray Dillinger wrote:
I have
Le 09/11/2013 09:26, Ray Dillinger a écrit :
[...]
I don't understand how it can possibly happen, because I have completely
unplugged
that hard drive, flashed the BIOS of the machine with the most recent
update
[...]
Asus website says that Bios rev = 1203 needs to be converted by an
utility
On 11/09/2013 06:08 AM, didier gaumet wrote:
The machine is an Asus Sabertooth X79 motherboard, IA64 Sandy Bridge
architecture,
[...]
On the Asus website, this is not an IA64 motherboard, but a X86-64
(amd64) one. Trying an amd64 version of Debian could help...
On the ASUS website the board
..
Any hint on what might be going on ?
Did you check if it isn't a Secure Boot problem? If you have UEFI instead of
BIOS, try finding something like Boot Mode - Legacy/Secure in UEFI setup and
set it to Legacy.
--
http://mr.flossdaily.org
--
To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-user-requ
for future reference if anyone faced this issue.disabling EFI in bios
settings and initiating a clean install does the trick.
From: r_o_l_a_...@hotmail.com
To: debian-user@lists.debian.org
Subject: Debian wheezy boot problem - Boot sector not identified by board
Date: Mon, 7 Oct 2013 09:54:11
All,
I have an intel dh77kc board. it previously had windows 7 installed on it.i
tried installing debian wheezy net install. installation goes perfectly fine up
untill reboot.once reboot is done, i get Initializing and establishing link
and immediately goes into network bootI tried resetting
Le 06.10.2013 18:34, Curt a écrit :
On 2013-10-06, berenger.mo...@neutralite.org
berenger.mo...@neutralite.org wrote:
Any idea about how to be able to run terminal stuff correctly in
recovery mode? Maybe changing the terminal (if so, how could I do
that?)?
export TERM=linux
says google
Le 07.10.2013 09:54, Roland RoLaNd a écrit :
All,
I have an intel dh77kc board. it previously had windows 7 installed
on it.
i tried installing debian wheezy net install. installation goes
perfectly fine up untill reboot.
once reboot is done, i get Initializing and establishing link
and
Le 05.10.2013 14:54, berenger.mo...@neutralite.org a écrit :
Hi.
Since my last kernel update my desktop can not boot anymore, it is
stuck at Switching to clocksource tsc. Also, nothing at all reply,
even the keyboard does just nothing.
Of course, I was stupid enough to remove the last kernel
On 2013-10-06, berenger.mo...@neutralite.org berenger.mo...@neutralite.org
wrote:
Any idea about how to be able to run terminal stuff correctly in
recovery mode? Maybe changing the terminal (if so, how could I do
that?)?
export TERM=linux
says google
--
To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to
Hi.
Since my last kernel update my desktop can not boot anymore, it is
stuck at Switching to clocksource tsc. Also, nothing at all reply,
even the keyboard does just nothing.
Of course, I was stupid enough to remove the last kernel without
testing it, and I have no idea about what is wrong.
It would've been helpful not to have snipped the drive partition
info section! :)
You have a gpt-labelled disk but sda1 isn't OK. As File system, it
should have BIOS Boot partition. Boot sector type and Boot sector
info cannot be right but I don't know what they should be.
The two looks at
On Fri, 16 Mar 2012 20:52:37 +, luizlmarins hotmail.com wrote:
(please, no html... thanks)
See here:
http://linuxmeu.wordpress.com/grub-nao-aparece/
But GRUB does appear in this case. What happens is that it hangs when
booting Debian.
Greetings,
--
Camaleón
--
To UNSUBSCRIBE,
[snip]
I'll also try the SuperGrub2Disk ASAP.
[snip]
Yes, it works when booting using a SuperGrub2Disk CD.
From SuperGrub2Disk boot menu :
Detect any OS - Debian correctly found on /dev/sda4 - boot is OK.
So I suppose the GRUB on the hard disk is incorrectly setup.
As the boot-info script
On Sat, 17 Mar 2012 18:30:51 +0100, Bruno Costacurta wrote:
Bruno, you MUA is somehow deleting both References: and In-Reply-To:
header fields and thus your posts are kept unthreaded.
[snip]
I'll also try the SuperGrub2Disk ASAP.
[snip]
Yes, it works when booting using a SuperGrub2Disk
On Thu, Mar 15, 2012 at 2:55 PM, Bruno Costacurta tec...@costacurta.org wrote:
Another thing you can test is manually booting your Debian system from
GRUB2 boot menu by reaching the command line. This way if you're lucky
any error you get will be printed on the screen.
Indeed you're right.
On Thu, 15 Mar 2012 19:55:39 +0100, Bruno Costacurta wrote:
..
Another thing you can test is manually booting your Debian system from
GRUB2 boot menu by reaching the command line. This way if you're lucky
any error you get will be printed on the screen.
..
Indeed you're right.
'Operating
'Operating System not found' is displayed once boot via GRUB command line.
[snip]
What's the output of bootinfoscript?
[snip]
So I ran boot_info_script.sh.
Which returns the following (snipped to mainly show /dev/sda4 on which
Debian is installed) :
Boot Info Script 0.60from 17
On Fri, Mar 16, 2012 at 3:13 PM, Bruno Costacurta tec...@costacurta.org wrote:
= Grub2 (v1.99) is installed in the MBR of /dev/sda and looks at sector
946507840 of the same hard drive for core.img. core.img is at this
location and looks for on this drive.
...
sda1:
File system:
On Wed, 14 Mar 2012 20:48:03 +0100, Bruno Costacurta wrote:
I installed Debian Squeeze on a multi-boot PC where Ubuntu is the
first and bootable distro.
Are you chainloading GRUB2s or are you loading Debian directly from
Ubuntu's own GRUB2 version?
I boot direclt from the Ubuntu's own
..
Another thing you can test is manually booting your Debian system from
GRUB2 boot menu by reaching the command line. This way if you're lucky
any error you get will be printed on the screen.
..
Indeed you're right.
'Operating System not found' is displayed once boot via GRUB command line.
I
Hello,
I installed Debian Squeeze on a multi-boot PC where Ubuntu is the
first and bootable distro.
Using GRUB2, the options 'nosplash debug --verbose' are used, but
Debian freezes silently.
How to make boot verbose to see what happen ?
Hereafter the /boot/grub/grub.cfg :
menuentry test
On Wed 14 Mar 2012 at 11:06:04 +0100, Bruno Costacurta wrote:
I installed Debian Squeeze on a multi-boot PC where Ubuntu is the first
and bootable distro.
Using GRUB2, the options 'nosplash debug --verbose' are used, but Debian
freezes silently.
How to make boot verbose to see what happen
On Wed, 14 Mar 2012 11:06:04 +0100, Bruno Costacurta wrote:
I installed Debian Squeeze on a multi-boot PC where Ubuntu is the first
and bootable distro.
Are you chainloading GRUB2s or are you loading Debian directly from
Ubuntu's own GRUB2 version?
Using GRUB2, the options 'nosplash debug
I installed Debian Squeeze on a multi-boot PC where Ubuntu is the first
and bootable distro.
Are you chainloading GRUB2s or are you loading Debian directly from
Ubuntu's own GRUB2 version?
I boot direclt from the Ubuntu's own GRUB2 version.
Using GRUB2, the options 'nosplash debug
On Wed 14 Mar 2012 at 20:48:03 +0100, Bruno Costacurta wrote:
Yes, the GRUB2 menu is reached (in fact, it's used to boot the other
system on same PC). The Debian system hangs direcly. Nothing is
displayed.
Yes, a LiveCD Debian 6 works fine (however it was a i386, the installed
Debian is
Sthu Deus (sthu.d...@gmail.com on 2011-12-06 01:18 +0700):
Thank You for Your time and answer, Arno:
a) locking the root account (passwd -l root), which will give you
sulogin: root account is locked, starting shell
That's the point - sudo is used on the system and the root account
Thank You for Your time and answer, Arno:
Thank You for Your time and answer, Arno:
a) locking the root account (passwd -l root), which will give you
sulogin: root account is locked, starting shell
That's the point - sudo is used on the system and the root account is
blocked.
Thank You for Your time and answer, Arno:
a) locking the root account (passwd -l root), which will give you
sulogin: root account is locked, starting shell
That's the point - sudo is used on the system and the root account is
blocked.
So, what's the strategy to protect systems in such
On Lu, 28 nov 11, 13:47:59, Sthu Deus wrote:
Good time of the day.
Once mount error occurs while OS booting, I get root shell - w/o even
asking for password... How I can change the behavior (to ask for
password before granting root shell)?
Hi Sthu,
From reading the thread I understand your
Thank You for Your time and answer, Arno:
Hmm. I thought everybody has the same OS behavior in such
condition... And the problem here is only improper/default
configuration.
That could very well be, but I haven't had a boot problem in years
(well, except when trying out systemd). A standard
Thank You for Your time and answer, Joel:
Recently had fun with Fedora, when it didn't like the way I specified
my HDs, it would drop me into the ctrl-d prompt, but I couldn't go
anywhere beyond that. Any key I pressed, including ctrl-d, would cycle
me another ctrl-d prompt.
When I had the
Sthu Deus (sthu.d...@gmail.com on 2011-12-03 17:53 +0700):
[..] A standard Debian config
should not offer a passwordless root shell unless you explicitly ask
for it,
Oh, no! I didn't! :)
Do You have an idea where to look for that? - I have no ideas,
absolutely.
Just as a pointer, you
On Fri, 02 Dec 2011 14:04:15 +0700, Sthu Deus wrote:
Thank You for Your time and answer, Camaleón:
You mean Busybox? :-?
I do not know - it appears when something wrong during boot process.
It should be printed out, something like:
***
BusyBox v1.10.2 (Debian x-x-x-x) Built-in shell (xxx)
Thank You for Your time and answer, Arno:
From here it's all guesswork. You'd need to provide a full bootlog up
to the point where the shell is started to get any meaningful answers.
Hmm. I thought everybody has the same OS behavior in such condition...
And the problem here is only
here is only improper/default configuration.
That could very well be, but I haven't had a boot problem in years
(well, except when trying out systemd). A standard Debian config should
not offer a passwordless root shell unless you explicitly ask for it,
but I can think of at least four ways to get
Thank You for Your time and answer, Camaleón:
Once mount error occurs while OS booting, I get root shell - w/o even
asking for password...
You mean Busybox? :-?
I do not know - it appears when something wrong during boot process.
How I can change the behavior (to ask for password before
Thank You for Your time and answer, Arno:
Once mount error occurs while OS booting, I get root shell - w/o even
asking for password... How I can change the behavior (to ask for
password before granting root shell)?
Do you get a message 'root account locked, starting shell?'
No.
fsck
On Thu, 01 Dec 2011 23:49:00 +0700, Sthu Deus wrote:
Thank You for Your time and answer, Camaleón:
Once mount error occurs while OS booting, I get root shell - w/o even
asking for password...
You mean Busybox? :-?
I do not know - it appears when something wrong during boot process.
It
Sthu Deus (sthu.d...@gmail.com on 2011-12-01 23:54 +0700):
fsck errors should drop into a sulogin shell, which asks for the
password. The only way you could get a root shell is if your root
device cannot be found. In that case, there is no way to ask for a
password because there is no
Thank You for Your time and answer, Camaleón:
You mean Busybox? :-?
I do not know - it appears when something wrong during boot process.
It should be printed out, something like:
***
BusyBox v1.10.2 (Debian x-x-x-x) Built-in shell (xxx)
***
Oh, no. It's not my case. Nor I have the packages
On Mon, 28 Nov 2011 13:47:59 +0700, Sthu Deus wrote:
Once mount error occurs while OS booting, I get root shell - w/o even
asking for password...
You mean Busybox? :-?
How I can change the behavior (to ask for password before granting root
shell)?
If you refer to busybox, AFAIK is not a
Sthu Deus (sthu.d...@gmail.com on 2011-11-28 13:47 +0700):
Once mount error occurs while OS booting, I get root shell - w/o even
asking for password... How I can change the behavior (to ask for
password before granting root shell)?
Do you get a message 'root account locked, starting shell?'
Good time of the day.
Once mount error occurs while OS booting, I get root shell - w/o even
asking for password... How I can change the behavior (to ask for
password before granting root shell)?
Thanks for Your time.
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On 9/14/2011 10:39 AM, Andrés Durán wrote:
Hello to all, and sorry for may bad english, i'm Spanish.
I'm trying to install Debian 6 on one server without internal disks, I
have a Workstation running Debian 6 too that run as an iSCSI Target. This work
station is configured as iSCSI
Hello to all, and sorry for may bad english, i'm Spanish.
I'm trying to install Debian 6 on one server without internal disks, I
have a Workstation running Debian 6 too that run as an iSCSI Target. This work
station is configured as iSCSI target with the package iscsitarget, it is
Hello to all, and sorry for may bad english, i'm Spanish.
I'm trying to install Debian 6 on one server without internal disks, I
have a Workstation running Debian 6 too that run as an iSCSI Target. This work
station is configured as iSCSI target with the package iscsitarget, it is
Hi,
I made a fresh install of debian squeeze just after its release and
dutifully installed the updates suggested by the package manager
whenever necessary.
1) This morning, I did the same (what the package manager calls a safe
update, no packages where removed or installed) but in between
I made a fresh install of debian squeeze just after its release and
dutifully installed the updates suggested by the package manager
whenever necessary.
What's the content of your sources.list?
2) The only thing that worked was switching between x (ctrl+alt+f7) and
the terminal
On 2011-05-12 12:53 +0200, Jochen Schulz wrote:
udevd[58]: error: runtime directory '/run/udev' not writable, for
now falling back to '/dev/.udev'
That looks like you are actually running testing or unstable.
FWIW, the error message has not been present in udev versions before
168, and that
Eccles, David wrote:
From: Simon Hoerder [mailto:si...@hoerder.net]
1) This morning, I did the same (what the package manager calls a safe
update, no packages where removed or installed) but in between the
update crashed the system.
...
udevd[58]: error: runtime directory '/run/udev' not
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