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Re: Error al actualizar el sistema (initscripts)



El vie, 06-10-2006 a las 13:06 +0200, xve escribió:
> Hola Iñigo, no tengo puesto ninguno... aqui te adjunto mi fstab...
> 
> # /etc/fstab: static file system information.
> #
> # <file system> <mount point>   <type>  <options>       <dump>  <pass>
> proc            /proc           proc    defaults        0       0
> /dev/sda3       /               ext3    defaults,errors=remount-ro 0       1
> /dev/sda1       /boot           ext3    defaults        0       2
> /dev/sda4       /home           ext3    defaults        0       2
> /dev/sda2       none            swap    sw              0       0
> /dev/hdd        /media/cdrom0   iso9660 ro,user,noauto  0       0
> /dev/hdc        /media/cdrom1   iso9660 ro,user,noauto  0       0
> /dev/fd0        /media/floppy0  auto    rw,user,noauto  0       0
> 
> Saludos y gracias anticipadas

[inigo][zeus]:~$ zcat /usr/share/doc/initscripts/README.Debian.gz
tmpfs
-----

Around kernel version 2.3.3x, a memory based filesystem was
introduced to support POSIX shared memory, called 'shmfs'.
Later this filesystem was extended for general usage and a
"tmpfs" could be mounted. The CONFIG_TMPFS kernel compile option
must be set to 'y', as it is for Debian kernels.

Early in the 2.4 kernel series, shmfs was renamed to tmpfs, but
could be mounted using either 'shmfs' or 'tmpfs'. Starting with
kernel version 2.5.44, the 'shmfs' alias was dropped.

Confusingly, in kernels 2.3.x - 2.5.43 where both "shmfs" and
"tmpfs" are present, disabling CONFIG_TMPFS actually removes
support for shmfs, but tmpfs is still listed in /proc/filesystems
to support SYSV and POSIX shared memory, and it should still be
mounted under /dev/shm.

Recommendation: always enable CONFIG_TMPFS and always mount
using the tmpfs type. Forget about shmfs.

Tmpfs can be used as memory filesystem, so you can limit tmpfs
max size using /etc/default/tmpfs to prevent tmpfs from using
up all system memory.

[inigo][zeus]:~$ cat /boot/config-`uname -r` | grep TMPFS
CONFIG_TMPFS=y

Mira a ver si es eso... si lo tienes como 'm' prueba modprobe tmpfs
antes de lanzar el upgrade y si lo tienes como 'n', pues a recompilar o
a arrancar con un kernel de debian para hacer el upgrade. Y si no,
prueba con apt-get -f install, a ver si te actualiza. Yo tampoco tengo
nada como tmpfs en el fstab, pero curiosamente está montado:

[inigo][zeus]:~$ mount | grep tmpfs
udev on /dev type tmpfs (rw,mode=0755)
devshm on /dev/shm type tmpfs (rw)

Suerte

-- 

,---------------------------------------------------------------------,
| Iñigo Tejedor Arrondo    http://navarrux.org   inigo(a)navarrux.org |
|---------------------------------------------------------------------|
|                                                                     |
| Debian - The universal operative system.                            |
|                                                                     |
| "You can choose, get the freedom, get the power, apt-get in to it." |
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