How to avoid “Welcome to emergency mode!”
Just after power on I got to :
[[0;32m OK [0m] Started Login to default iSCSI targets.
[[0;32m OK [0m] Reached target Remote File Systems (Pre).
[[0;32m OK [0m] Reached target Remote File Systems.
Welcome to emergency mode! After logging in, type "journalctl -xb" to view
system logs, "systemctl reboot" to reboot, "systemctl default" or ^D to
try again to boot into default mode.
Give root password for maintenance
(or press Control-D to continue):
How to avoid this?
Who is getting in the way and showing this Welcome to emergency mode!
?
May I disable any service so that in the next reboot it didn't happen?
This question is part of another one: Amazon AWS EC2 Volume issue prevents instance access via SSH
linux ubuntu debian amazon-web-services amazon-ec2
add a comment |
Just after power on I got to :
[[0;32m OK [0m] Started Login to default iSCSI targets.
[[0;32m OK [0m] Reached target Remote File Systems (Pre).
[[0;32m OK [0m] Reached target Remote File Systems.
Welcome to emergency mode! After logging in, type "journalctl -xb" to view
system logs, "systemctl reboot" to reboot, "systemctl default" or ^D to
try again to boot into default mode.
Give root password for maintenance
(or press Control-D to continue):
How to avoid this?
Who is getting in the way and showing this Welcome to emergency mode!
?
May I disable any service so that in the next reboot it didn't happen?
This question is part of another one: Amazon AWS EC2 Volume issue prevents instance access via SSH
linux ubuntu debian amazon-web-services amazon-ec2
1
Did youtype "journalctl -xb" to view system logs
?
– Kamil Maciorowski
Jun 15 '17 at 19:28
1
No, because I do not have access to the machine, it's on amazon aws.
– KcFnMi
Jun 15 '17 at 19:31
add a comment |
Just after power on I got to :
[[0;32m OK [0m] Started Login to default iSCSI targets.
[[0;32m OK [0m] Reached target Remote File Systems (Pre).
[[0;32m OK [0m] Reached target Remote File Systems.
Welcome to emergency mode! After logging in, type "journalctl -xb" to view
system logs, "systemctl reboot" to reboot, "systemctl default" or ^D to
try again to boot into default mode.
Give root password for maintenance
(or press Control-D to continue):
How to avoid this?
Who is getting in the way and showing this Welcome to emergency mode!
?
May I disable any service so that in the next reboot it didn't happen?
This question is part of another one: Amazon AWS EC2 Volume issue prevents instance access via SSH
linux ubuntu debian amazon-web-services amazon-ec2
Just after power on I got to :
[[0;32m OK [0m] Started Login to default iSCSI targets.
[[0;32m OK [0m] Reached target Remote File Systems (Pre).
[[0;32m OK [0m] Reached target Remote File Systems.
Welcome to emergency mode! After logging in, type "journalctl -xb" to view
system logs, "systemctl reboot" to reboot, "systemctl default" or ^D to
try again to boot into default mode.
Give root password for maintenance
(or press Control-D to continue):
How to avoid this?
Who is getting in the way and showing this Welcome to emergency mode!
?
May I disable any service so that in the next reboot it didn't happen?
This question is part of another one: Amazon AWS EC2 Volume issue prevents instance access via SSH
linux ubuntu debian amazon-web-services amazon-ec2
linux ubuntu debian amazon-web-services amazon-ec2
asked Jun 15 '17 at 19:17
KcFnMiKcFnMi
215212
215212
1
Did youtype "journalctl -xb" to view system logs
?
– Kamil Maciorowski
Jun 15 '17 at 19:28
1
No, because I do not have access to the machine, it's on amazon aws.
– KcFnMi
Jun 15 '17 at 19:31
add a comment |
1
Did youtype "journalctl -xb" to view system logs
?
– Kamil Maciorowski
Jun 15 '17 at 19:28
1
No, because I do not have access to the machine, it's on amazon aws.
– KcFnMi
Jun 15 '17 at 19:31
1
1
Did you
type "journalctl -xb" to view system logs
?– Kamil Maciorowski
Jun 15 '17 at 19:28
Did you
type "journalctl -xb" to view system logs
?– Kamil Maciorowski
Jun 15 '17 at 19:28
1
1
No, because I do not have access to the machine, it's on amazon aws.
– KcFnMi
Jun 15 '17 at 19:31
No, because I do not have access to the machine, it's on amazon aws.
– KcFnMi
Jun 15 '17 at 19:31
add a comment |
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
We ran into this problem, and I spent 3+ hours trying to fix it. Turns out, one of the EBS wasn't reattached after instance reboot, and since the mount was hardcoded in /etc/fstab, it failed during startup. Once we attached the EBS back to the instance, everything came back up.
Another thing to note: if you reattached the EBS without specifying which /dev/ it's mounted, the EBS will have a different /dev/ point; however, this won't cause an error, as fstab uses device ID and not device location.
add a comment |
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1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
We ran into this problem, and I spent 3+ hours trying to fix it. Turns out, one of the EBS wasn't reattached after instance reboot, and since the mount was hardcoded in /etc/fstab, it failed during startup. Once we attached the EBS back to the instance, everything came back up.
Another thing to note: if you reattached the EBS without specifying which /dev/ it's mounted, the EBS will have a different /dev/ point; however, this won't cause an error, as fstab uses device ID and not device location.
add a comment |
We ran into this problem, and I spent 3+ hours trying to fix it. Turns out, one of the EBS wasn't reattached after instance reboot, and since the mount was hardcoded in /etc/fstab, it failed during startup. Once we attached the EBS back to the instance, everything came back up.
Another thing to note: if you reattached the EBS without specifying which /dev/ it's mounted, the EBS will have a different /dev/ point; however, this won't cause an error, as fstab uses device ID and not device location.
add a comment |
We ran into this problem, and I spent 3+ hours trying to fix it. Turns out, one of the EBS wasn't reattached after instance reboot, and since the mount was hardcoded in /etc/fstab, it failed during startup. Once we attached the EBS back to the instance, everything came back up.
Another thing to note: if you reattached the EBS without specifying which /dev/ it's mounted, the EBS will have a different /dev/ point; however, this won't cause an error, as fstab uses device ID and not device location.
We ran into this problem, and I spent 3+ hours trying to fix it. Turns out, one of the EBS wasn't reattached after instance reboot, and since the mount was hardcoded in /etc/fstab, it failed during startup. Once we attached the EBS back to the instance, everything came back up.
Another thing to note: if you reattached the EBS without specifying which /dev/ it's mounted, the EBS will have a different /dev/ point; however, this won't cause an error, as fstab uses device ID and not device location.
answered Aug 1 '17 at 21:16
Tam N.Tam N.
120211
120211
add a comment |
add a comment |
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1
Did you
type "journalctl -xb" to view system logs
?– Kamil Maciorowski
Jun 15 '17 at 19:28
1
No, because I do not have access to the machine, it's on amazon aws.
– KcFnMi
Jun 15 '17 at 19:31