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Hello!!:D
The last night I just full upgrade system pacman -Syu, kernel 2.6.27 to 2.6.28-3, but today Arch not boot, the error:
Atempting to create root device /dev/disk/by-uuid .............
Root device '/dev/sda6' doesn't exist, attempting to create it
ERROR Failed to parse block device name for /dev/sda6
ERROR unable to create/detect root device /dev/sda6
Dropping to a recovery shell.... type 'exit' to reboot
NOTE: klibc contains no 'ls' binary use echo * instead
If the device '/dev/disk/by-uuid .............' gets created while you are here, try adding 'rootdelay=8' or higher to the kernel command line
ramfs$_
Or something like these, don't remember very well, tried the rootdelay=8 and the problem persist
Menu.lst from Grub and fstab have the same UUID
GRUB root=/dev/disk/by-uuid/e9d98cf9-015f-4513-ae84-eba302f18266
and fstab UUID=e9d98cf9-015f-4513-ae84-eba302f18266
Then I check the directory /dev/ and surprise!! anything here except for null, console
Any ideas?
PD: Sorry for my bad english, i learning it!
Last edited by Anthraxp12 (2009-01-18 04:51:49)
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at a guess, i bet your initcpio didn't get rebuilt properly. do you have /boot on a separate partition? is it usually mounted? if so, is it normally mounted ro or rw?
if you can boot your system--or chroot into it from a livedisk--try rebuilding you initcpio, making sure that /boot mounted and mounted rw.
[23:00:16] dr_kludge | i want to invent an olfactory human-computer interface, integrate it into the web standards, then produce my own forked browser.
[23:00:32] dr_kludge | can you guess what i'd call it?
[23:01:16] dr_kludge | nosilla.
[23:01:32] dr_kludge | i really should be going to bed. i'm giggling madly about that.
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I had a similar problem in my VirtualBox ArchLinux installation when I changed the virtual hard drive from
a IDE to SATA. Arch refused to boot with the same kind of error. I then reverted to IDE and modified
/etc/fstab with the name of the device directly instead of the UUIDs. Like /dev/sdaX etc.. in the first column
of fstab. Then when I rebooted with the SATA hard drive everything worked fine. Use fdisk -l for finding out the
device number sdaX. Hope this helps
(A quick check with hdparm -Tt /dev/sdaX also gave me higher buffered read speeds than with the IDE emulator)
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at a guess, i bet your initcpio didn't get rebuilt properly. do you have /boot on a separate partition? is it usually mounted? if so, is it normally mounted ro or rw?
if you can boot your system--or chroot into it from a livedisk--try rebuilding you initcpio, making sure that /boot mounted and mounted rw.
Nop /boot are in the same partition,!
Ok I check with livedisk!! thanks!
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