View Single Post
  #2   (View Single Post)  
Old 24th October 2022
J65nko J65nko is offline
Administrator
 
Join Date: May 2008
Location: Budel - the Netherlands
Posts: 4,128
Default

You installed using an emulated usb stick to the qemu emulated hard drive. This probably changed the emulated hard drive number into ada1? Or it caused the /etc/fstab which is used to mount the partitions to refer to a wrong drive number (ada0)?.

You can boot using the emulated usb stick into the live CD and investigate which are the valid drives (in dmesg).

With # gpart show -p you can list the partitions.

Then mount the hard drive root partition and check the contents of /etc/fstab and correct the drive number.
__________________
You don't need to be a genius to debug a pf.conf firewall ruleset, you just need the guts to run tcpdump
Reply With Quote