On 10/26/23, Schwibinger Michael <h...@hotmail.com> wrote: > > Good afternoon > Thank You for help. > > I ll answer into Your email > with > +++ > > > Von: Andrew M.A. Cater <amaca...@einval.com> > Gesendet: Mittwoch, 25. Oktober 2023 12:04 > An: Schwibinger Michael <h...@hotmail.com> > Betreff: Re: AW: AW: Panic again any idea IV > > On Wed, Oct 25, 2023 at 10:59:09AM +0000, Schwibinger Michael wrote: >> Good morning >> >> Thank You. >> >> I do booting. >> Crash. >> Bug report I did send. >> > > Hi Sophie, > > Thank you. You didn't really send a bug report > > > +++ > I know. > But how can I produce a bug report > when the PC is frozen?
An afterthought up top here: Is there a program that will snag and retain boot messages specifically geared toward systems that never fully boot? It seems like I've seen that topic come up and be answered one single time in the last ~25 years. I actually tried to find some form of that type of program the other day when I saw an earlier portion of this thread then. I was thinking, hoping maybe such a program could possibly be installed via chroot if it does exist. Now my original thought.......... Has chroot been suggested and/or attempted? I'm imagining that it was possibly yes, suggested. If not, what about attempting a chroot to then next attempt apt or apt-get update then upgrade? As a user who has occasionally battled issues, I know that, ideally, it would be nice, i.e. satisfying, to find the cause of bigger issues like this. At some point, I also know firsthand that outing the cause becomes less important when weighed against moving on in Life. :) Apt/apt-get upgrade via chroot would potentially help preserve a particular setup rather than going with a new install if that is why this continues to be a topic. If anyone can think of a reason why running apt/apt-get in chroot would only stand to cause data harm in this particular situation, that would be great to know. My firsthand experience has been that tinkering via chroot has eventually gotten me back up and running maybe 99% of the time, including against multiple kernel panic-ish fails a few years ago. Biggest reason my chroot repair attempts ever failed was due to not properly mounting maybe 4 or 5 basic necessities that apt/apt-get use to properly install programs. /dev and /proc come first to mind as examples there. That knowledge came from working through the manual steps necessary during debootstrap installs, in case that ever helps anyone else. Cindy :) -- Talking Rock, Pickens County, Georgia, USA * runs with a retirement state of mind *