Kernel panic: VPS: Unable to mount root fs on cciss/c0d0p6

Hi Guru’s ,

I have problem in my Suse HP Server can not booting normaly , there are event error " Kernel panic: VPS: Unable to mount root fs on cciss/c0d0p6 " , what the meaning for this error ? thank youuu

> I have problem in my Suse HP Server can not booting normaly , there are
> event error " Kernel panic: VPS: Unable to mount root fs on
> cciss/c0d0p6
" , what the meaning for this error ? thank youuu

i suspect the “cciss/c0d0p6” is the name of some RAID drive, perhaps
/dev/cciss/c0d0p6, and the error says the root file system cannot be
mounted on that div…which sounds like somthing may be amiss at your
VPS host…have you contacted them (your VPS host) on this matter,
what do they say?

otherwise:

-please mention the full model of the HP

-and the version of the “Suse”, is that SUSE Linux Enterprise 11 (or
10) and SP what?

-or, it is some version of openSUSE? which.


dd

Hi Danverd,

Thank you for you respons, below response for your question
zxqas@linux:~> df -k
Filesystem 1K-blocks Used Available Use% Mounted on
/dev/cciss/c0d0p3 10325016 4419128 5381404 46% /
tmpfs 8314400 16 8314384 1% /dev/shm
/dev/cciss/c0d0p1 130361 10657 112973 9% /boot
/dev/sdc1 941990684 676755004 217385276 76% /qasdata03
/dev/sde1 920636352 708026096 165844644 82% /qasdata01
/dev/sdh1 255931868 31619264 211312008 14% /qasdata04
/dev/sdf1 965513104 661382960 255084908 73% /qasdata02
/dev/cciss/c0d0p5 30967164 1186300 28207824 5% /home
**/dev/cciss/c0d0p6 30967164 1001068 28393056 4% /sybase **
/dev/cciss/c0d0p7 51608952 4419860 44567492 10% /data

otherwise:

-please mention the full model of the HP

**HP DL580G5
**
-and the version of the “Suse”, is that SUSE Linux Enterprise 11 (or
10) and SP what?

**Welcome to SUSE Linux Enterprise Server 11 SP1 (x86_64) - Kernel 2.6.32.12-0.7-
default (4).
**

-or, it is some version of openSUSE? which.


dd[/QUOTE]

On 05/31/2013 04:46 AM, trisno wrote:
> WELCOME TO SUSE LINUX ENTERPRISE SERVER 11 SP1

these are the openSUSE forums…

most people here have never seen nor run SUSE Linux Enterprise Server
(SLES), so you are much better served by the people who
provide/support SLES.

please contact them at this address: http://forums.suse.com/

the user ID and password used here works there also…

note: you might get an answer here, but it might not be close to
correct–there is easily that much difference between supported SLES
and openSUSE versions.


dd