On 07/02/2015 01:23 PM, Chris Murphy wrote:
On Thu, Jul 2, 2015 at 10:57 AM, Glenn Holmer
wrote: openSUSE Tumbleweed here on a multi-boot system. One of the other Linux installs reformatted the swap partition, so it has a different UUID now. As far as I can tell, that's keeping SUSE from booting, because it drops to an emergency shell and one of the last messages I see says that the UUID for the swap partition doesn't exist.
I edited /etc/fstab to change it to match /dev/disk/by-uuid, and I also edited the "resume=" lines in grub.cfg, but it still won't boot (with the same message referencing the old UUID). I can't find anyplace else where the old UUID is specified.
Anybody have any ideas?
This sounds like a dracut bug, where the initramfs has that UUID baked into it. Try rebuilding the initramfs and see if that fixes the problem.
That's what I was starting to think. How do you re-create the initramfs from an emergency shell?
In my case it was the EFI system partition that it was hanging up on https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1187007
Harald's workaround (hostonly_cmdline="no") didn't work for me. -- Glenn Holmer (Linux registered user #16682) "After the vintage season came the aftermath -- and Cenbe." -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org To contact the owner, e-mail: opensuse+owner@opensuse.org