Manuel Enrique Chávez Manzano
2007-Apr-06 13:26 UTC
[CentOS] Troubles with starting CentOS beta 5
Hi list I'm new here, but I've been using CentOS for about 2 years. I had some problems today, there was a blackout and I couldn't poweroff my machine on the right way, when I turn on the machine again everything when right until the dialogo Activating swap/fstab. the pc freezed there and didn't go on, my question is,what was going on and how can I resolve that without reinstalling the pc? forgive me any bad writing, I'm not an english speaker. thanks for any help you can give me. manny -- Se puede enga?ar a parte del pueblo todo el tiempo, y a todo el pueblo parte del tiempo, lo que no se puede es.... ENGA?AR A TODO EL PUEBLO TODO EL TIEMPO....Abraham Lincoln. USE LINUX NO SE DEJE ENGA?AR (@ @) |------------o00o-(_)-o00o-----------| | Manuel Enrique Ch?vez Manzano | | manuel864 at gmail.com | | manny at jagua.cfg.sld.cu | | GNU/LINUX User | | #424754 | | | |-----------------------ooo----------|
On Fri, 2007-04-06 at 09:26 -0400, Manuel Enrique Ch?vez Manzano wrote:> Hi list > I'm new here, but I've been using CentOS for about 2 years. > I had some problems today, there was a blackout and I couldn't poweroff my > machine on the right way, when I turn on the machine again everything > when right until the dialogo Activating swap/fstab. the pc freezed there > and didn't go on, > my question is,what was going on and how can I resolve that without > reinstalling the pc? > > forgive me any bad writing, I'm not an english speaker. > thanks for any help you can give me. > mannyBEWARE - This procedure will destroy data if used incorrectly. Read the e-mail and understand what you are doing before you run any commands listed in this e-mail. I have not seen this on CentOS, but have seen similar behaviour on FC5. In my case there is something wrong with the swap partition. If you boot into single mode with recovery media or by appending the word single to the grub kernel line the PC will boot into a root bash shell. At this stage mkswap <swap partition, e.g. /dev/hda2, /dev/sda3 etc.> will recreate the swap partition. The trick is to know what partition the swap is on. The swap partition is probably listed in /etc/fstab, so cat /etc/fstab | grep swap will possibly list one or more swap entries. Alternatively if your swap is not on LVM you can identify it with: fdisk -l /dev/hda (or sda for SCSI / SATA). IF you have multiple disks the followings ones will be on hdb,hdc or sdb sdc etc. Partitions with ID 82 is swap, ID 83 is Linux. Note that this is a general rule - it is possible to force the creation of partitions where the partitions was created as another type, for example with improper use of mkswap above. Once you have recreated your swap partiton init 3 or init 5 (depending on if you run a gui or not) will get the PC back into its normal operating mode. This procedure is a bit sketchy on lots of the detail, so ask if you need more detail. BEWARE - This procedure will destroy data if used incorrectly. Read the e-mail and understand what you are doing before you run any commands listed in this e-mail.