On Sun, Jun 14, 2015 at 10:51 PM, jd1008 <jd1008@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > > On 06/14/2015 08:02 PM, Animesh Pandey wrote: > >> On Sun, Jun 14, 2015 at 9:47 PM, jd1008 <jd1008@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: >> >> >>> On 06/14/2015 07:36 PM, Animesh Pandey wrote: >>> >>> On Sun, Jun 14, 2015 at 9:06 PM, jd1008 <jd1008@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: >>>> >>>> >>>> On 06/14/2015 06:47 PM, Animesh Pandey wrote: >>>>> >>>>> I actually opened the Virtual Disk Image (.vdi) on >>>>> >>>>>> http://www.vmxray.com/ >>>>>> . >>>>>> I could see that despite my disk being of 100GB only ~65GB was being >>>>>> shown. >>>>>> All the stuff related ot the local user was not visible at all. >>>>>> After I restarted my VM, the OS gets stuck here ( >>>>>> http://i.stack.imgur.com/KVYxV.png). Even after trying the single >>>>>> user >>>>>> login it was stuck there. But the emergency mode worked alright. >>>>>> >>>>>> On Sun, Jun 14, 2015 at 8:37 PM, jd1008 <jd1008@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: >>>>>> >>>>>> >>>>>> On 06/14/2015 06:28 PM, Animesh Pandey wrote: >>>>>> >>>>>>> Hi, >>>>>>> >>>>>>> I am working on Centos6.6 on a VirtualBox on Windows Host. Today I >>>>>>>> started >>>>>>>> to have booting issues in the OS. It won't get past the loading >>>>>>>> screen. >>>>>>>> I >>>>>>>> checked and found that the files related to the user "cloudera" on >>>>>>>> the >>>>>>>> system were not accessible. Only the files related to root were >>>>>>>> accessible. >>>>>>>> This is why I was am not able to do a single user login but an >>>>>>>> emergency >>>>>>>> login was possible. This is just a guess. >>>>>>>> This all happened due to some update in the Virtual Machine that I >>>>>>>> use >>>>>>>> to >>>>>>>> run CentOS. >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>> Is there any workaround for this issue? >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>> Thanks and regards, >>>>>>>> Animesh Pandey >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>> I wish you could provide more info. >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>> How can you determine that inaccessibility to a user's >>>>>>> files will prevent centos from taking you all the way to >>>>>>> the login (or welcome) screen? >>>>>>> >>>>>>> I think something else is going on and my guess is that >>>>>>> the centos files themselves have been corruped. >>>>>>> Can you re-install centos ? >>>>>>> >>>>>>> Please do not top-post. >>>>>>> >>>>>> I am having trouble following your terminology. >>>>> Emergency model? >>>>> On my centos installation, there is no "Emergency ...." >>>>> to select from the list of kernels to boot. >>>>> >>>>> Also, when you say "worked alright" do you >>>>> mean that you were able to access what you thought >>>>> was missing? >>>>> Can you go to full multiuser? >>>>> >>>>> >>>>> >>>>> Sorry for top posting. >>>>> >>>> Let me give you a clearer idea. >>>> >>>> 1. My regular boot freezes after loading is completed. >>>> 2. I read on the internet that sometimes due to an update in VirtualBox, >>>> this error might occur. To rectify it, I must re-install VirtualBox's >>>> Guest >>>> Additions. For this, I require booting in a Single User Mode. >>>> 3. For that, I followed the correct steps as given here ( >>>> >>>> >>>> https://www.centos.org/docs/5/html/Installation_Guide-en-US/s1-rescuemode-booting-single.html >>>> ). >>>> But still the system froze on that same point. >>>> 4. Then I read about an Emergency mode which is even lower level to that >>>> of >>>> Single User mode. I was able to log in and see the files that I >>>> created/modified as root. I could not see any file/folder that related >>>> the >>>> local user "cloudera" on which I used to work. This is where I thought >>>> of >>>> seeing the contents of the Image using vmxray.com and found that a >>>> large >>>> part of the dick is not visible. This part contains that files related >>>> to >>>> "cloudera". I felt as if any information related to "cloudera" user has >>>> been lost. >>>> >>>> I basically need to access files that I made as "cloudera" on CENTOS and >>>> if >>>> possible re-install the Guest Additions that ma solve this issue. But >>>> for >>>> this I need to be able to boot as a Single User. >>>> >>>> I assume you are using a virtual drive, which is a file on the host >>> machine (You said windows??? ). >>> If you can somehow use a tool to dump that disk image to >>> a real hard drive (for example using dd ), and connect >>> the hard drive a a working linux computer to run fsck on it >>> to see what it will find. >>> I assume you have no backup of your drive??? >>> >>> >>> _______________________________________________ >>> CentOS mailing list >>> CentOS@xxxxxxxxxx >>> http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos >>> >>> Yes it is windows. By dumping a disk image do you mean a VDI (VirtualBox >> Disk Image). These are files that are used by VirtualBox for booting. I >> have a copy of that as well. Can Gparted be used for connecting that VDI? >> >> You will more than likely need a conversion tool to convert a vdi > image to a normal HD image. I do not know of such a tool. > > Another possibility is to create another VM, install your linux on it > with it's own separate disk, but add you bad vdi disk > as a second drive. Once booted, use linux to fsck the second > drive. > Again, be sure you have a copy it before you connect it to this > new VM. > > > _______________________________________________ > CentOS mailing list > CentOS@xxxxxxxxxx > http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos > I did exactly as you said. I used Gparted to create a secondary drive. I can do "/dev/" to see the four partitions that my original VM had. How do I go about it now? _______________________________________________ CentOS mailing list CentOS@xxxxxxxxxx http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos