Read the statement by Michael Teeuw here.
Everything was going so well
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@JMac You could try
systemctl stop udev
and then try running it again. My knowledge of these linux things are not that great. Orservice udev stop
might work. I am leaning towards the card being a goner thought. -
@mumblebaj It would be way easier if I could recover the previous setup but I’m starting to feel like it might be worth starting the entire MM install again, but for me that’s the least interesting parts of Pi builds.
The files are still available on the old SD card so the card itself isn’t completely kaput.
edit to add I ran the systemctl stop udev command.
put in the password of the MM to allow this.
re ran sudo e2fsck -f -v /dev/mmcblk0p2
and get the same e2fcsk: cannot continue, aborting error. -
@JMac You can use the scripts from Sam to install MM. You can find them here. Always do a backup of your install with one of Sam’s script as this would save tears in the end. I have been there before and the backup and restore process saved me a few times.
Scripts can be located here:
https://github.com/sdetweil/MagicMirror_scripts -
@JMac you cant whack on a file system if its mounted for access,do
df -k
will show u the devices and where they are mounted then sudo umount /dev/… what you were using
df -k should show it gone
then the fsck… commands should work w sudo -
@JMac if u can get the config, custom
css and and listing of the modules ( ls command) we can build the backup/restore files -
@sdetweil sorry to be dense how do I know what I’m unmounting?
am I unmounting /dev/mmcblk0p1?? it says thats mounted on /boot.edit to add,
after re running sudo fdisk -l it would appear the old memory card (with my previous MM setup on) is on Disk /dev/sdathats classed as Disk Model: storage device (as it’s mounted in the usb drive atm) does this seem correct? is this the one which needs unmounting?
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@JMac well mounted means accessible by the filesystem
so it’s /dev/sda
the usb installed sd cardso
sudo unmount /dev/sda
and then run fsck on that -
so I run the command sudo umount /dev/sda
and get
umount: /dev/sda: not mounted.so should now go,
e2fsck -f -v /dev/sda
not the original
e2fsck -f -v mmcblk0p2?
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@JMac correct… you had to find the disk name
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@sdetweil when i run e2fsck…
I get
e2fsck: permission denied while trying to open /dev/sda
you must have r/w access to the filesystem or be root.