![]() ![]() Ubuntu Core started to Bootstrap but got stuck in Stopped/Started Getty Installing on a NVMe resulted in the follwoing first So I resized the writable partition ni the drive manager of Ubuntu live to around 3.5 GB what resolved the problem The comment it might be related to missing disk space made me think that it could be related to the dynamic disk space allocation of VMWare as the disk space is not pre-allocated. So again I asked Google for help and found rvice fails on boot based “fully seeded” screenshot below. I cannot remember if I got that after the very first flash and install attemptīut once again I felt somehow destroyed. I tried to install Ubuntu Core on NVMe as I expected a better performance compared to SATA, I gave up with the standard SCSI drive, as there was only leftover but all was set correctly. ![]() I started experimenting adding a SATA and NVMe drive what was found by the system As only a few commands are available I used cat /proc/scsi/scsi and cat /proc/partitions (as all other commands in linux - How do I find out what hard disks are in the system? - Unix & Linux Stack Exchange won’t work) what told me there is nothing besides the CDROM but I wondered how it could even boot then? Installing Ubuntu Core on devices with internal drivesĮventually, it just clicked and I started searching for the drive.Why snap_core and snap_kernel in boot cmdline. ![]() Ubuntu Core cannot find 'writable' partition.About findfs: unable to resolve 'LABEL=writable'.Occasionally, the boot dropped to a (initramfs) prompts/busybox It failed again as, throwing the same error. I worked with and Ĭonverting didn’t work it always failed with findfs: unable to resolve ‘LABEL=writable’, so I decided to do a reinstall, using standard settings. I’m on VMWare Palyer 15.5.6 and Ubuntu 20 as live image. ![]() It looks like that it is not that easy at it may sounds. I was able to install Unbuntu Core in Hyper-V, see Ĭurrently, I have to work with VMWare, so I thought lets do the same thing again or just convert the disk to vmdk. ![]()
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