On Fri, 2015-02-06 at 22:57 +0100, Rafal Pietrak wrote: > W dniu 06.02.2015 o 20:31, Ben Hutchings pisze: > > Control: retitle -1 Boot fails due to missing ext4 module > > > > On Fri, 2015-02-06 at 18:48 +0100, Rafał Pietrak wrote: > >> W dniu 04.02.2015 23:07, Ben Hutchings pisze: > > [...] > >>>> Severity: grave > >>>> Tags: newcomer > >>>> Justification: renders package unusable > >>>> > >>>> I've upgraded my LG notebook (X-note: LS50a) from wheezy to jessie and: > >>>> 1. the upgrade have installed kernel "version-i585" in addition to my > >>>> earlier > >>>> (automatically installed during an upgrade to wheezy) "version-i486". > >>>> 2. when booting "i486", it fails to modprobe "ext4-fs" during the boot. > >>>> It > >>>> breaks boot sequence, but manual (from shell prompt) modprobe ext4 does > >>>> not > >>>> load the module into the kernel. > > Can you clarify how far the system boots? Does it stop at a shell with > > the prompt '(initramfs)'? > > Stops at: "maintenance mode. Give root password or control-D"
Oh, so this is not an initramfs problem as I suspected. > And I think, it does that because /srv/pgdat is ext4 and cannot be > mounted because of missing ext4.ko within the kernel. [...] Then I think the package is not properly installed. Do these commands produce any output? debsums -c linux-image-3.2.0-4-486 debsums -c linux-image-3.16.0-4-586 If not, does modprobe start working if you run 'depmod' first? Ben. -- Ben Hutchings The first rule of tautology club is the first rule of tautology club.
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