Le 18/12/2017 à 02:29, Hendrik Boom a écrit :
On Sun, Dec 17, 2017 at 11:36:19PM +0100, Didier Kryn wrote:
Le 17/12/2017 à 19:13, Hendrik Boom a écrit :
On Sun, Dec 17, 2017 at 02:03:52PM +0100, Florian Zieboll wrote:
On Sat, 16 Dec 2017 21:42:05 -0500
Hendrik Boom <hend...@topoi.pooq.com> wrote:

How do I update the initrd?
To update the /initrd/initramfs/ of a not-booting system, I chroot into
it, (mount the /boot partition) and "bind mount" /dev. Then

$ update-initramfs -u

and

$ update-grub
First time I've done something like that in chroot.
It would be something like

mkdir /ascii/dev
mount --bind /dev /ascii/dev
chroot /ascii
update-initramfs -u
update-grub

?

     /ascii/dev should exist already. You just need to mount it.
It doesn't.

     I suggest also the following:
     mount -t proc none /ascii/proc
     mount -t sysfs none /ascii/sys

     This raises the question: "how did you clone your OS?" Because, if you
copied it while /dev, /sys, /proc, and /run where mounted, then you have
stored a lot of things that shouldn't be there. Better check and empty those
directories on /ascii.
I copied them with rsync, using the option that copies one file system
only; i.e. does not cross file system boundaries.  That's why there
is no /ascii/dev -- the original /dev was a mounted file system
created by I presume udev.
    But you need the mountpoints for /dev, /proc, /sys, that is empty directories. Look at what you have in / and check you have all the same directories in /ascii (not /ascii/ascii, of course). The OS is spread in /bin, /boot, /lib, /lib32, /lib64, /etc, /opt, /root, /sbin, /srv, /usr, /var. Some can be empty (/root, /opt, /srv); apt-get dist-upgrade will modify the contents of all these directories. They should, of course not be shared between your two OSes.

    You can use rsync as you did, for all the directories other than proc, sys, run and dev, after all those which are mountpoints have been mounted. Then mount /ascii/{proc, sys, dev} as said above, and then chroot.
And, before booting your new OS, check carefully the fstab.

Which is why I thought I had to create the mount point in ascii.
Now I suspect I'd also have to create /sys /proc and /run as
additional mount points?

Or should I start over, booting refracta instead of my new system and
using refracta to copy everything when everything isn't the working
system?

    Cloning a running OS is non-trivial. It is easier to clone it when it is not running, for example, plugging the disk in another machine running its own OS, or using a third OS on the same machine, as I understand you propose.ALso, beware that the two OSes should not be mixed. At the maximum, they can share /home, and, even for /home it is dangerous: the applications on the newer OS will update users' config filesthe first time they are used (eg firefox or thunderbird) and make them unusable in the older OS.

    For what concerns grub, as far as I understand, you should not need to chroot to run update-grub. update-grub is supposed to detect all OSes present on the machine and create a boot menu. Better run it on your main OS.

        Didier

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