Hi /wsr/, i've got a problem with my installation of BunsenLabs Linux (based on Debian). It's been working without any problems on my ThinkPad T400 (Core 2 Duo P8400, 4GB RAM, 240GB SanDisk SSD Plus) until this afternoon. When I power the laptop on, it goes through GRUB as normal, and then attempts to boot the OS, when I get '---[ end trace d2c18659b393e46a ]---
Could someone with more knowledge than me help me out? I can't get into the command line or a GUI. It just halts at this error.
>>257588
Bump
Hey, if you're still having issues, could you provide these things:
In the GRUB boot menu, press E and post a picture of the screen (with your phone or whatever).
Press ESC to go back to the boot menu and press C to open the command line. Enter these two commands (they'll take a while to process):
ls -l -h /
search -f /grub/grub.cfg
and post a picture of the results. If it says something like directory not found try this instead:
ls -l -h /boot/
search -f /boot/grub/grub.cfg
>>257671
Oh, I just read that you said you can't go into a command line, can you not open the GRUB command line either or do you just mean like a terminal?
If you have any other kernel installed, can you boot from them in the boot menu?
>>257675
A standard terminal is what I can't open, it hangs. However, I managed to get the GRUB command line up, and here's my results. Sorry about the blurriness, taking photos with an iPad mini is hard as fuck.
>>257588
Picture 2
>>257685 Sorry for the delay, I don't see any errors so I'm not sure what the problem is. Here are some things you can try but don't expect them to work:
1. In the boot menu press E to open the editor and for the line "linux" remove the "initrd=..." and "quiet", and add the parameter "nomodeset" at the end.
Ctrl-X to save changes. Any changes you make here will be restored when you restart the system by the way, so you don't need to worry about doing any damage.
2. Remove the "quiet" parameter and add "single" instead.
3. Replace "intrd=..." with "initrd=/boot/initrd.img-3.16.0-4-amd64".
4. Replace "/boot/vmlinuz-3.16.0-4-amd64" with "/vmlinuz".
5. Replace the UUID reference for root, I don't know how to find out find it's referencing though if you can't access a terminal.
You can try to play around with this but if you don't find anything that works you'll probably need to update grub, update your kernel/install a different kernel, or reinstall your OS.