Difference between revisions of "Ubuntu Xen System Boot Hangs After Setting System Clock Message"
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This is a problem related to the hwclock binary which is common to a number of different Linux distributions in addition to Ubuntu. This problem can occur both when booting the host Xen system and when when launching guest (domainU) systems. | This is a problem related to the hwclock binary which is common to a number of different Linux distributions in addition to Ubuntu. This problem can occur both when booting the host Xen system and when when launching guest (domainU) systems. | ||
− | If the problem is encountered when booting the host system with a Xen enabled kernel, boot the system with the standard (i.e non-Xen | + | If the problem is encountered when booting the host system with a Xen enabled kernel, boot the system with the standard (i.e non-Xen) and run the following commands: |
<pre> | <pre> | ||
sudo su | sudo su | ||
− | + | update-rc.d -f hwclock.sh remove | |
− | + | update-rc.d -f hwclockfirst.sh remove | |
</pre> | </pre> | ||
Revision as of 18:46, 28 April 2008
After installing the Ubuntu xen-server packages and rebooting the operating system using the Xen kernel the boot process appears to hang after displaying the "Setting system clock..." message.
This is a problem related to the hwclock binary which is common to a number of different Linux distributions in addition to Ubuntu. This problem can occur both when booting the host Xen system and when when launching guest (domainU) systems.
If the problem is encountered when booting the host system with a Xen enabled kernel, boot the system with the standard (i.e non-Xen) and run the following commands:
sudo su update-rc.d -f hwclock.sh remove update-rc.d -f hwclockfirst.sh remove
If the problem is occurring in a Xen domainU system, an option is to simply edit the same two system initialization files. The first step is is to mount the root filesystem of the guest using the loopback interface. For example, if the root filesystem resides on a disk image it may be mounted at /tmp/mnt as follows:
mkdir /tmp/mnt sudo mount -o loop UbuntuXen.img /tmp/mnt
Alternatively, if the domainU root filesystem resides on a physical disk partition (in this example /dev/sdb1), the mount command might read as follows:
mkdir /tmp/mnt sudo mount -o loop /dev/sdb1 /tmp/mnt
Once the domainU root filesystem is mounted, edit the following files:
init.d/hwclockfirst.sh init.d/hwclock.sh
and place a exit 0 line immediately after the #!/bin/sh. For example:
#!/bin/sh exit 0
Once one of these sets of changes has been made to both the hwclockfirst.sh and hwclock.sh, files simply unmount the domainU root filesystem and the guest Ubuntu system should boot fully without hanging.