Re: lost connection during yum update

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On 03/10/2013 07:47 AM, Frank Cox wrote:
> Well, this is interesting.  I have three systems, all of which now have the
> same problem.
>
> I was running "yum update" on these machines via a vnc connection (running a
> vnc desktop on one of them, and logging into the others with a a
> gnome-terminal on my vnc desktop), when my vnc desktop suddenly "went away" for
> some reason.  And that killed the "yum update" jobs on the computers.
>
> Subsequent to that, I logged back into the machines and ran yum update again. It
> told me to run yum-complete-transaction.  When I ran yum-complete-transaction I
> got screen after screen of "x is a duplicate with x" where x consists of a huge
> list of packages.
>
> I then ran "package-cleanup --cleandupes" and then ran "yum update" again and
> all appeared to be well.  "yum update" completed without error and I thought I
> was home free.
>
> I then rebooted the machines and found out that I'm still out of luck.  After
> the initial grub screen I get this:
>
> Kernel panic - not syncing: VFS: unable to mount root fs on unknown-block(0,0)
> PID: 1,comm: swapper not tainted 2.6.32-358.0.1.el6.i686 #1
> Call trace
>
> Followed by a series of numbers that I can post if they're needed.
>
> I booted one of these machines off of a Centos 6.4 "minimal" CD and ran the
> rescue mode.  It mounted the drive under /mnt/sysimage with no problem.  I
> can see everything on it that I expect to see.
>
> I then booted the CD again and tried running the "upgrade an existing system"
> option, and told it to reinstall the bootloader.  That's about all that it
> appeared to do: "Installing bootloader", then it told me to reboot. Which I did.
>
> And I got the same kernel panic again that I just posted above.
>
> What has gone wrong here and how can I fix it?   All of the data seems to be on
> the drive just like it should be, but it won't boot up.
>
> Again, I have three systems that appear to have exactly the same problem.
>
>
Try chroot from minimal CD onto the systems and use "yum history" to see 
what happened and "yum history undo <number of transaction>"
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