Hello, I know some people had this problem before but no solution seems to help me. I was playing Kerbal Space Program, the game filled up my RAM, my computer was no longer responding (it happens to me a few times a month if I forgot to close firefox before playing for example). I had to hard shutdown, then on the boot I get this kernel panic. (Here is a screenshot: http://dettorer.net/kernel_panic.jpg) The init= parameter given by grub is correct: /usr/lib/systemd/systemd and I double checked the root= parameter, it is by uuid but I also tried by device name (/dev/sda7) and by label. I use three partitions: sda5: /boot (sda6: swap) sda7: / sda8: /home `fdisk -l /dev/sda` http://paste.awesom.eu/ux8 `ls -l /dev/disk/by-uuid` http://paste.awesom.eu/85U Using the output of a new `grub-mkconfig` didn't fix it either. Here is my grub.cfg: http://paste.awesom.eu/aDR I tried running `mkinitcpio -v -p linux` (I use the 3.8 kernel from core but also tried the 3.9 from testing, same result) Here is my mkinitcpio.conf: http://paste.awesom.eu/yVH and the output of `mkinitcpio -v -p linux` http://paste.awesom.eu/6f3 I checked the filesystems of my / and /boot partitions with badblocks and fsck, no problem from here. (I also tried reformating my swap with mkswap as the second line of kernel panic mention swapper even though I didn't understand that line, I just gave it a try). I don't know what to do now, my guess is that the initramfs can't mount the root partition but the root= parameter is correct and everything mount well under a liveCD (this is from where I try to fix it). PS: It's my first post on arch-general, sorry if my question is off-topic or poorly presented. -- Dettorer