[ale] init problem after dist-upgrade

Narahari 'n' Savitha savithari at gmail.com
Mon Jan 31 20:23:20 EST 2011


Once I see the errors, I end up with a BusyBox shell, initramfs and it looks
like I can run only a few commands.

Is there any expert in the Marietta area that I can seek help from ?  I am
in the east cobb area.

-Narahari

On Mon, Jan 31, 2011 at 6:32 AM, Chuck Peters <cp at axs.org> wrote:

> On Sun, Jan 30, 2011 at 11:38 AM, Narahari 'n' Savitha <
> savithari at gmail.com> wrote:
>
>> Friends:
>>
>> I upgraded my ubuntu with the command sudo apt-get dist-upgrade.
>> I then have a new entry in the grub list.
>>
>> When I boot to the .25 or .24 version of the kernel, I get the message
>>
>> init not found, pass value to init.
>>
>> I am not sure how to do this and also why this even happened ?
>>
>> I have not made any hardware changes.
>>
>> -Narahari
>>
>> PS:  For me to post screen shot please let me know where and how to post
>> images.
>>
>
> Don't bother with the screen shots.
>
> Maybe I should first mention:  Do you have your data backed up?  If so you
> can reinstall and recover...  Or use a LiveCD and backup your data to a USB
> drive or rsync over the network.
>
> But if this is right you will need to fix the filesystem before recovering
> the data...
> First hit of google Maverick init not found, pass value to init
> http://ubuntuforums.org/showthread.php?t=1594621
>
> All they did was manually fsck the filesystem. fsck is file system check
> for ext2,3,4 file systems.  They didn't seem to cover how they did it all
> that well since it seems to have just one partiton, so here is a little
> trick that might make it easier. Put a file called forcefsck in the root of
> the partition or partitions will force the file system check.
>
> Boot with a LiveCD, probably what you used to install Ubuntu. Use whatever
> GUI file manager thing they have, the web page talks about using gparted, I
> thought that was for partitioning, not mounting drives... In kde dolphin is
> the default GUI file manager, to mount the partition or partitions, click on
> the left side.  Make sure it is a ext partition, you don't want to do this
> on xfs or other partition types without making sure you don't need other
> options or whatever, ie xfs has its own repair utility.
> Open a terminal...
> df -h, or lshw or dmesg to determine the filesystem you want.
> mount with no options to check the filesystem type
> sudo touch /forcefsck  using the correct path.
>
> For example I plugged in a 40GB PATA drive with one of those USB adapters.
> Mounted it with dolphin.
> cp at meerkat:~$ df -h
> Filesystem            Size  Used Avail Use% Mounted on
> /dev/sda1              19G  4.3G   15G  23% /
> ...
> /dev/sda7             270G   22G  248G   8% /home
> /dev/sda6             9.2G  2.3G  6.5G  26% /mythbuntu
> /dev/sdb1              36G   22G   13G  64% /media/disk
> cp at meerkat:~$ mount
> /dev/sda1 on / type ext4 (rw,errors=remount-ro,commit=0)
> ...
> /dev/sda7 on /home type xfs (rw)
> /dev/sda6 on /mythbuntu type ext4 (rw,commit=0)
> /dev/sdb1 on /media/disk type ext4 (rw,nosuid,nodev,uhelper=hal)
> cp at meerkat:~$ sudo touch /media/disk/forcefsck
> cp at meerkat:~$ sudo umount /media/disk
> and reboot without the CD...
>
> Hopefully all goes well, it will take longer than normal to boot since the
> fsck can take a while depending on the size of the partition(s).
>
> If it doesn't work you will likely see some message about having to run
> fsck manually.  Repeat the above steps and run fsck on the partition.  In
> the example above I would run fsck /dev/sdb1.
>
>
> My first thought was it sounds like grub, the boot loader, can't find the
> root filesystem.  For that see:
> https://help.ubuntu.com/community/Grub2
>
> Look at the "Reinstalling Grub" and "Command line and Rescue mode"
> sections.  Usually the easiest way to do this is boot with a LiveCD, aka the
> standard Ubuntu CD you used to install it (not the alternate cd) or a USB
> key setup properly with the LiveCD.  Note it can be done with the alternate
> CD or other boot/rescue tools, but then you are limited to command line
> (can't open firefox to the above URL) and make sure you have the right
> version of grub.
>
> I should mention a couple caveats here. grub-install -v as mentioned in the
> help page will tell you the version of grub on the livecd. You should be
> able to determine the version by looking in the logs of the install, in the
> above example /media/disk/var/log/apt/term* or
> /media/disk/var/log/installer/ ,   The page mentions "No *
> /boot/grub/menu.lst*. It has been replaced by */boot/grub/grub.cfg"*. They
> have changed the way grub works, so on an upgraded machine you may have the
> menu.lst file, all my 10.04 machines were upgraded and still have the
> menu.lst file.
>
> If the problem is as Mike Warfield suggested, the solution is to mount the
> partition(s) and use a chroot to reinstall the kernel or manually recreate
> initramfs.
>
> Chuck
>
>
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