Finally I've been able to migrate to systemctl and PC booted correctly.
The only problem is that after starting samba# systemctl enable smbd.service # systemctl enable nmbd.service # systemctl start smbd.service # systemctl start nmbd.service
I'm not able to see this computer from other PCs
Should I do anything else?
This isn't the thread for that question...
]]># systemctl enable smbd.service
# systemctl enable nmbd.service
# systemctl start smbd.service
# systemctl start nmbd.service
I'm not able to see this computer from other PCs
Should I do anything else?
]]>resucitado .............................
estos son los pasos con cd instalacion de archlinux (el que he usado yo)
I did everything what electric_indigo adviced to point 4
electric_indigo wrote:
1. Boot into a LiveCD.
2. Open terminal, log in as root.
3.
# cd /
# mkdir BrokenArch
# mount /dev/[Arch's partition here] BrokenArch
# cd BrokenArch
# ln -s usr/bin bin
# ln -s usr/sbin sbin
# mount --bind /dev dev
# mount --bind /proc proc
# mount --bind /run run
# mount --bind /sys sys
then
#chroot . /usr/bin/bash
#pacman -S filesystem
/bin exists...etc
ok...rename /bin to /bin_old, /usr/sbin/ to /usr/sbin_old, remove /sbin link at all
then again
#pacman -S filesystem
it installs without any errors
At last reboot and remove live usbflash
init=/usr/lib/systemd/systemd
to your kernel command line, either on-the-fly during boot by editing it during grub, or permanently, by booting a LiveCD and editing menu.lst. You really should have done this months ago, but oh well. Nothing is broken, you just haven't got an "init" binary, hence the '/sbin/init does not exist' message, declaring init on the kernel command line overrides the hardcoded path.
]]>But **again** this has been very thoroughly covered in many places including the wiki. Don't expect to continue to be "hand-fed" - don't be a help vampire.
]]>http://img585.imageshack.us/img585/6880/k3i8.jpg
When booting from Fallback I get this one
http://img856.imageshack.us/img856/984/85rm.jpg
I think I broke the full system.
EDIT: adding init=/usr/lib/systemd/systemd makes the system boot, but Xs don't start neither automatically or manually
Any idea?
-- mod edit: read the Forum Etiquette and only post thumbnails http://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/For … s_and_Code [jwr] --
]]>Strictly speaking, once you rename that file, you should be fine as long as you don't tinker with the bootloader. But to be on the safe side you should go one way or the other, so either:
A) install grub-legacy from AUR and remove grub
B) follow the grub (2.x) configuration instructions in the wiki.
Again, this is far from urgent and can be put off for a bit - your system will run just fine as is.
]]>The simplest fix is to boot into a live media, mount your boot partition and `mv /mnt/grub/menu.lst.pacsave /mnt/grub/menu.lst`
This is well covered (many times) in the thread(s) about this issue.
]]>What can I do?
]]>archlinuxfr is an unoffical repo, you should check that for outdated packages.
No output for:
$ paclist archlinuxfr | awk ' { print $1 } ' | pacman -Ql - | grep ' /s\?bin/\| /usr/sbin/'
May I continue now?
]]>