You are not logged in.
Pages: 1
It seems to not like /home or /. Tried reinstalling Arch using ext3 instead of ext4 but I still get the same error. I tried searching for a fix on the forums already but couldn't find one that worked for me.
Misc Info:
- Using VirtualBox 3.1.2
- Using 2009.08 netinstall iso
Last edited by NightKev (2010-02-17 05:15:11)
Offline
I haven't used Arch Linux on VirtualBox but I might help. I got the same screen after installing Arch on my desktop once, the problem was that GRUB was not installed correctly. Is GRUB installed in VB?
Offline
GRUB seems to be working fine, how would I check to make sure?
Offline
I don't know how you would do so in VB, but on my desktop I used an Arch LiveCD to reinstall GRUB in order to get /root and the kernel image working from the /boot directory. I entered the command "grub" as root in a terminal to open the grub prompt "grub>" then I entered "find /boot/grub/stage1" and received back" (hd1,1)" which is where my root partition was located. I then entered "root (hd1,1)" and then "setup (hd0)" and then "quit". It installed GRUB to the MBR. I don't know if that's helpful in your case though, but if GRUB is installed it could be.
Offline
if your fstab entry for your drive isn't using uuid (persistent naming), this occasionally happens if the drive naming changes (sda becomes sdb), usually if you either put in a new drive or update the kernel - change your fstab to the uuid used by grub and see if it works
Offline
It seems GRUB is working fine, as far as I can tell.
fstab:
/dev/hda1 /boot ext2 defaults 0 1
/dev/hda2 swap swap defaults 0 0
/dev/hda3 / ext4 defaults 0 1
/dev/hda4 /home ext4 defaults 0 1
Offline
see http://bbs.archlinux.org/viewtopic.php?id=85934
Don't use the 'Legacy IDE' option when installing. Even if your system doesn't have SATA, use the standard install instead.
Offline
The best solution for this is to get ubuntu/gparted/systemrescue live cd, boot it up, open gparted (system->administration->gparted), and use it to repair the filesystem.
Offline
The problem could be that your fstab is using /dev/hd? and the drive lettering has changed. See my article in the February Arch Linux mag on how to use UUIDs:
Offline
Oh sorry forgot to respond, "rockin turtle" was right, that fixed it. Thanks for the help.
Offline
Pages: 1