I think I found the culprit albeit I still don't know how to fix.
1. During boot the screen prints the following errors
"no fstab.sys, mounting internal defaults
...
No devices found
Setting up Logical Volume Management: /var/lock: mkdir failed: No such
file or directory"
I have a LV on RAID mounted as /mnt/raid. Then /mnt/raid/var is
symlinked to /var. I found on the internet that some linux systems look
for /var/lock or /var/run on / partition only. Obviously LVM can not
create its file in /var/lock, perhaps /mnt/raid is not mounted yet
during /var/lock mkdir operation.
2. Second important finding is that /forcefsck forces only software raid
not the hardware one. It does the check for md0 (/temp), md1 (/boot),
and md2 (/). It skips /dev/raid_vg0/raid_lv0 (/mnt/raid) altogether. I
don't know how to force to check it durin reboot.
3. I changed to init level 1. Then tried to umount /mnt/raid. But all I
received was "device is busy" prompt. "umount -l /mnt/raid" was able
unmount /mnt/raid. Then tried to run "fsck /mnt/raid". This time I received
"fsck.ext2: Is a directory while trying to open /mnt/raid
The superblock could not be read or does not describe a correct ext2
filesystem. If the device is valid and it really contains an ext2
filesystem (and not swap or ufs or something else), then the superblock
is corrupt, and you might try running e2fsck with on alternate superblock:
e2fsck -b 8193 <device>"
I tried with one of the superblocks on /mnt/raid. This time I get
"fsck.ext3: Device or resource busy while trying to open
/dev/raid_vg0/raid_lv0
Filesystem mounted or opened exclusively by another program?"
Sorry for the long post.
This is the point I arrived. I am stumped.
Thank your for all the support.
Mufit
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