After Updating my 14.04 thro' internet, system is not opening.

Ramachandran Chidambaraiyer ramachandran.chidambaram at gmail.com
Tue Oct 13 12:45:39 UTC 2015


Sudo: not found
(without sudo)
//in/sh: parted not found

(initramfs) 2nd com
/bin/sh: /bin/sh: sudo not found//report_fdisk.txt: not found
(initramfs)   parted -| > ~/report_parted.txt
parted: not found

On Tue, Oct 13, 2015 at 3:43 PM, <silver.bullet at zoho.com> wrote:

> On Tue, 13 Oct 2015 11:58:45 +0200, Ralf wrote:
> >On Tue, 13 Oct 2015 15:05:16 +0530, Ramachandran Chidambaraiyer wrote:
> >>On Sat, Oct 3, 2015 at 8:42 PM, Liam Proven wrote:
> >>> On 3 October 2015 at 02:49, Ramachandran Chidambaraiyer wrote:
> >>> > The hd is loaded with two versions of Ubuntu.No Microsoft
> >>> > partition.
> >>> Do not top-quote. Your reply goes /below/ the text you are answeing.
> >>>
> >>> Also disable all formatting in your replies; use plain text only.
> >>> This is an option in the drop-down menu at the bottom right of the
> >>> Gmail compose pane.
> >>>
> >>> Now, tell us about your disk structure -- how it is partitioned,
> >>> what it contains, etc.
> >>Ubuntu, Advanced options for Ubuntu, memory test, memtest 86+serial
> >>console 152000, Ubuntu 14.04 LTS (14.04) on /dev/sd1, Advanced options
> >>for Ubuntu 14.04 2 LTS (14.04)(on /dev/sd1), Ubuntu 15.04
> >>(15.04)(on/sd7), Advanced options for Ubuntu 15.04
> >>(15.04)(on /dev/sda7)
> >
> >Since you get the terminal screen log in. First you need to type your
> >user name, after that your are ask for your user password.
> >
> >After that run
> >
> >  sudo parted -l > ~/report_parted.txt
> >
> >or
> >
> >  sudo fdisk -l > ~/report_fdisk.txt
> >
> >then run
> >
> >  grep EE /var/log/Xorg.0.log > ~/report_xlog.txt
> >
> >Post the report_*.txt files.
>
> PS:
>
> IIUC this only happens to your Ubuntu 14.04, so after booting 14.04 and
> running the above commands you can boot your 15.04 by running
>   sudo shutdown -r now
> and access the files in your 14.04 /home/user_home and post them here.
> The shutdown command likely doesn't need sudo, but it might need root
> privileges. Running it with sudo doesn't harm.
>
>
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-- 
Ramachandran.C
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