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Full Discussion: Corrupted Hard Drive
Operating Systems Linux Red Hat Corrupted Hard Drive Post 302375689 by 2buck56 on Saturday 28th of November 2009 08:23:47 PM
Old 11-28-2009
Corona688, thanks for the prompt reply. Here is result of fdisk:
root@Knoppix:~# fdisk -l /dev/sda
Disk /dev/sda: 80.0 GB, 80032038912 bytes
255 heads, 63 sectors/track, 9730 cylinders
Units = cylinders of 16065 * 512 = 8225280 bytes
Device Boot Start End Blocks Id System
/dev/sda1 * 1 13 104391 83 Linux
/dev/sda2 14 9730 78051802+ 8e Linux LVM
root@Knoppix:~#

Also, this is the message I see when trying to boot FC-7:
Uncompressing Linux... OK, booting the kernel
Red Hat nash version 6.0.9 starting
Reading all physical volumes. This may take a while
Found volume group "VolGroup00" using metadata type lvm2
2 logical volume(s) in volume group "VolGroup00" now active
VFS: Can't find ext3 filesystem on dev dm-0
mount: error mounting /dev/root on /sysroot as ext3: Invalid argument
setuproot: moving /dev failed: No such file or directory
setuproot: error mounting /proc: No such file or directory
setuproot: error mounting /sys: No such file or directory
switchroot: mount failed: No such file or directory
Kernel panic - not syncing: Attempted to kill init!

And then the system hangs.

If I interrupt the bootup sequeuence I am able to get to a command
line grub prompt by seleting "e" "a" or "o".
 

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MOUNT.CONF(8)						    BSD System Manager's Manual 					     MOUNT.CONF(8)

NAME
mount.conf -- root file system mount configuration file SYNOPSIS
/.mount.conf DESCRIPTION
During the bootup process, the FreeBSD kernel will try to mount the root file system using the logic in the vfs_mountroot() function in src/sys/kern/vfs_mountroot.c. The root mount logic can be described as follows: 1. The kernel will synthesize in memory a config file with default directives for mounting the root file system. The logic for this is in vfs_mountroot_conf0(). 2. The kernel will first mount devfs(8) as the root file system. 3. Next, the kernel will parse the in-memory config file created in step 1 and try to mount the actual root file system. See FILE FORMAT for the format of the config file. 4. When the actual root file system is mounted, devfs will be re-mounted on the /dev directory. 5. If a /.mount.conf file does not exist in the root file system which was just mounted, the root mount logic stops here. 6. If a /.mount.conf file exists in the root file system which was just mounted, this file will be parsed, and the kernel will use this new config file to try to re-mount the root file system. See FILE FORMAT for the format of the config file. 7. If the new root file system has a /.mount directory, the old root file system will be re-mounted on /.mount. 8. The root mount logic will go back to step 4. The root mount logic is recursive, and step 8 will be repeated as long as each new root file system which is mounted has a /.mount.conf file. FILE FORMAT
The kernel parses each line in .mount.conf and then tries to perform the action specified on that line as soon as it is parsed. # A line beginning with a # is a comment and is ignored. {FS}:{MOUNTPOINT} {OPTIONS} The kernel will try to mount this in an operation equivalent to: mount -t {FS} -o {OPTIONS} {MOUNTPOINT} / If this is successfully mounted, further lines in .mount.conf are ignored. If all lines in .mount.conf have been processed and no root file system has been successfully mounted, then the action specified by .onfail is performed. .ask When the kernel processes this line, a mountroot> command-line prompt is displayed. At this prompt, the operator can enter the the root mount. .md file Create a memory backed md(4) virtual disk, using file as the backing store. .onfail [panic|reboot|retry|continue] If after parsing all the lines in .mount.conf the kernel is unable to mount a root file system, the .onfail directive tells the kernel what action to perform. .timeout N Before trying to mount a root file system, if the root mount device does not exist, wait at most N seconds for the device to appear before trying to mount it. If .timeout is not specified, the default timeout is 3 seconds. EXAMPLES
The following example .mount.conf will direct the kernel to try mounting the root file system first as an ISO CD9660 file system on /dev/cd0, then if that does not work, as an ISO CD9660 file system on /dev/acd0, and then if that does not work, as a UFS file system on /dev/ada0s1a. If that does not work, a mountroot> command-line prompt will be displayed where the operator can manually enter the root file system to mount. Finally if that does not work, the kernel will panic. .onfail panic .timeout 3 cd9660:/dev/cd0 ro .timeout 0 cd9660:/dev/acd0 ro .timeout 3 ufs:/dev/ada0s1a .ask The following example .mount.conf will direct the kernel to create a md(4) memory disk attached to the file /data/OS-1.0.iso and then mount the ISO CD9660 file system on the md device which was just created. The last line is a comment which is ignored. .timeout 3 .md /data/OS-1.0.iso cd9600:/dev/md# ro # Can also use cd9660:/dev/md0 ro The following example .mount.conf will direct the kernel to create a md(4) memory disk attached to the file /data/base.ufs.uzip and then mount the UFS file system on the md uzip device which was just created by the geom_uzip(4) driver. .md /data/base.ufs.uzip ufs:/dev/md#.uzip ro # Can also use ufs:/dev/md0.uzip ro The following example .mount.conf will direct the kernel to do a unionfs mount on a directory /jail/freebsd-8-stable which has a chroot(2) environment. .timeout 3 unionfs:/jail/freebsd-8-stable NOTES
For each root file system which is mounted, a /dev directory must exist so that the root mount logic can properly re-mount devfs(8). If this directory does not exist, the system may hang during the bootup process. SEE ALSO
nmount(2), md(4), boot.config(5), fstab(5), boot(8), loader(8), mount(8) HISTORY
The mount.conf file first appeared in FreeBSD 9.0. AUTHORS
The root mount logic in the FreeBSD kernel which parses /.mount.conf was written by Marcel Moolenaar <marcel@FreeBSD.org>. This man page was written by Craig Rodrigues <rodrigc@FreeBSD.org>. BSD
July 7, 2013 BSD
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