Wild guess here, your system clock is off.
You are right. For everyone who has the same problem first setup the system clock and then hardware clock. If you have new arch with systemd and never kernel, after reboot udev will drop you in maintance mode - dont panic just do the manual fsck on each partition you use, so the timestamp of last filesystem check gets updated. When you did that for each partition in maintance mode just do the systemctl reboot - and system will boot up again. After that you will be able to login.
Hope it helps.
]]>It is interesting that this bug still exists. I will leave this thread open, but I don't expect much in the way of discussion. If the tread starts to collect a bunch of "Me Too" posts, one of us moderators will probably close it.
]]>No login to forum possible with chromium without setting "Log me in automatically each time I visit."
23.0.1271.97 (Entwickler-Build 171054)
Betriebssystem Linux
WebKit 537.11 (Unknown URL@0)
JavaScript V8 3.13.7.5
on
Linux 3.6.10-1-ARCH #1 SMP PREEMPT Tue Dec 11 10:19:36 CET 2012 i686 GNU/Linux
What *seems* to have fixed it for me was selecting the check box on the login screen for automatic login everytime.
This is also the solution that I had came to when I was having that problem.
]]>What *seems* to have fixed it for me was selecting the check box on the login screen for automatic login everytime. This should not be necessary, but it seems my webkit browsers are not storing the proper cookies(?) unless that option is selected. Perhaps the webkit browsers are not seeing the login page and the target page as being the same session. This is entirely ignorant speculation as I know nothing about web browser engines - but nonetheless that check box made it work for me.
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