On Thu, Feb 12, 2009 at 02:44:15PM +0100, Joost Roeleveld wrote:
> On Thu, February 12, 2009 2:26 pm, John covici wrote:
> > on Thursday 02/12/2009 Joost Roeleveld(jo...@antarean.org) wrote
> >  > On Thu, February 12, 2009 2:05 pm, John covici wrote:
> >  > > on Thursday 02/12/2009 Joost Roeleveld(jo...@antarean.org) wrote
> >  > >  > On Thu, February 12, 2009 10:52 am, John covici wrote:
> >  > >  > > Hi.  I just upgraded a gentoo system from about August 2008 to
> >  > > current
> >  > >  > > -- including updating baselayout and openrt and now  when I boot
> > I
> >  > > get
> >  > >  > > a series of messages quite early in the boot modprobe: fatal
> > /sys is
> >  > >  > > not mounted.  Eventually it does boot and all seems to work with
> > the
> >  > >  > > exception of the script for my hsfmodem, but I am curious as to
> > what
> >  > >  > > those message mean and if there is a way to fix them.
> >  > >  > >
> >  > >  > > Any assistance would be appreciated.
> >  > >  >
> >  > >  > Did you include sysfs support to your kernel and do you have a
> >  > > directory
> >  > >  > '/sys'? (SYSFS)
> >  > >  > This can be found in: File systems / Pseudo filesystems in the
> > kernel
> >  > >  > configuration.
> >  > >  >
> >  > >  > The '/sys' filesystem is as important as '/proc' these days.
> >  > >
> >  > > The plot thickens -- by the time I log in after booting, /sys is
> >  > > mounted with the correct file system.  Still very strange.
> >  >
> >  > Hmm... so, something does solve the problem you are seeing at the
> >  > beginning later on.
> >  > Did you update all the configuration files (including the ones in
> >  > /etc/init.d/.. )?
> >  > It could be that something there is not set correctly.
> >  >
> >  > For now, I am assuming the issue is in the boot-sequence/runlevel.
> >  >
> >  > Can you check which services are in your boot-runlevel?
> >  > I have:
> >  > bootmisc, checkfs, checkroot, clock, consolefone, hostname, keymaps,
> >  > localmount, modules, net.lo rmnologin and urandom.
> >  > Think these are the default ones.
> >  >
> >  > Do you use an initrd? If yes, did you update this as well?
> >
> > I regenerated the initrd, but I am still using 2.6.20 kernel which I
> > will update soon, but I wonder if this is the problem -- something
> > wrong with the initrd, but regenerating did not fix it.  In my boot
> > level I have
> > bootmisc@
> > consolefont@
> > device-mapper@
> > fsck@
> > hibernate-cleanup@
> > hostname@
> > hwclock@
> > keymaps@
> > localmount@
> > modules@
> > mtab@
> > net.lo@
> > procfs@
> > root@
> > swap@
> > sysctl@
> > termencoding@
> > urandom@
> > in my sysinit I have
> > devfs@
> > dmesg@
> > udev@
> 
> Do you have "device-mapper" in your boot-level?
> In that case, you might want to check which init-script mounts the '/sys'
> filesystem as this script requires the /sys filesystem to be mounted.
> 
> May I ask why you have this added as I don't use it with my LVM drives.
> 
> --
> Joost
> 
>

http://bugs.gentoo.org/show_bug.cgi?id=258442

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