7th November 2017, 5:15
While booting up after a new install, I like to see what is happening during boot-up that's how I noticed my home partition failed to mount.
After being dropped to a shell I began to look for the problem, which happened to be a mis-labeled filesystem.
I opened /etc/fstab with nano, where I found my home partition along with others labeled "reiser" after changing that to "reiserfs". the resulting boot-up was successful.
All other filesystems were labeled correctly such as "btrfs" "ext4" and even "swap"
I thougth I would post this to give someone a heads up and maybe avoid a headache I don't where to post a bug report maybe you guys could.
I had never heard of Maui Linux but I was glad to find and gladder yet to
realize it is the descendant of my once favorite: Netrunner.
Thanks for the hard work and thank you for putting out a very fine Linux distribution.
Joe in Modesto, CA
(Sorry for the slow typing)
After being dropped to a shell I began to look for the problem, which happened to be a mis-labeled filesystem.
I opened /etc/fstab with nano, where I found my home partition along with others labeled "reiser" after changing that to "reiserfs". the resulting boot-up was successful.
All other filesystems were labeled correctly such as "btrfs" "ext4" and even "swap"
I thougth I would post this to give someone a heads up and maybe avoid a headache I don't where to post a bug report maybe you guys could.
I had never heard of Maui Linux but I was glad to find and gladder yet to
realize it is the descendant of my once favorite: Netrunner.
Thanks for the hard work and thank you for putting out a very fine Linux distribution.
Joe in Modesto, CA
(Sorry for the slow typing)