His problem could be the separate /usr partition which is no longer supported on modern Linux distributions because of the usr-merge. See his attached fstab.
I'm not sure whether the mount command has been moved to /usr/bin yet though. If yes, this could explain the problem.
Wrong label in fstab? Try replacing the UUID=etc etc with /dev/sda1
On Wed, Mar 29, 2017 at 2:35 AM, Jesse Talavera-Greenberg <jessetalavera@aol.com> wrote:
On 03/28/2017 05:30 AM, Jesse Talavera-Greenberg wrote:
However, the /boot partition (which uses ext3) is failing to mount
How does that manifest? What error message do you get? What are the contents
of your /etc/fstab?
Attached to this e-mail. And the error's manifestation appeared in
the logs I posted in my previous e-mail. Specifically this part:
Mar 27 22:39:23 motherfscker systemd[1]: Mounting /boot...
Mar 27 22:39:23 motherfscker systemd[1]: var.mount: Directory /var to mount over is not empty, mounting anyway.
Mar 27 22:39:23 motherfscker systemd[1]: Mounting /var...
Mar 27 22:39:23 motherfscker kernel: des_sparc64: sparc64 des opcodes not available.
Mar 27 22:39:23 motherfscker kernel: md5_sparc64: sparc64 md5 opcode not available.
Mar 27 22:39:23 motherfscker kernel: aes_sparc64: sparc64 aes opcodes not available.
Mar 27 22:39:23 motherfscker systemd[1]: boot.mount: Mount process exited, code=exited status=32
Mar 27 22:39:23 motherfscker systemd[1]: Failed to mount /boot.
Mar 27 22:39:23 motherfscker systemd[1]: Dependency failed for Local File Systems.
and I don't know why. The weird thing is that I can mount it manually just fine,
How do you mount it manually? Have you compared it to what's in /etc/fstab?
I mount it through `mount /dev/sda1 /boot`. That's about it.
though if I run systemctl default the console stops responding.
Did you actually read the manpage for systemctl to understand what "systemctl
default" does?
Quoting:
default
Enter default mode. This is mostly equivalent to isolate default.target.
and:
"isolate" is only valid for start operations and causes all other units to
be stopped when the specified unit is started. This mode is always used when
the isolate command is used.
So, "systemctl default" on Debian effectively kills all units except for the ones
that are wanted by default.target. Don't run "systemctl default".
Probably the default.target should be reconfigured in Debian's systemd package
to avoid this problem.
I don't understand what this means, can you elaborate? (I don't
know very much about configuring Debian.)
That being said, after I manually mounted /boot I was able to SSH
into the machine like nothing ever happened; it seems like the
default Linux login prompt just wasn't showing up. I think there's
a boot parameter to that effect? Now I'm confused.