fixed by @skullgiver : it was an entry in /etc/crypttab.

Thanks for all the help everyone. This was an awesome experience.


I don’t know how stupid this was to do but many articles suggested it should be fine.

I resized my mouted root partition. Showed a bunch of warnings on resizing a mounted drive but it worked. Also did a sudo resize2fs /dev/sdaX to complete it.

Went from: winEFI, Win11, EFI, root, swap, data1, data2, win-recovery

To : winEFI, Win11, EFI, root, new-data1, win-recovery

But now every boot takes an additional 60-90 seconds with a blank screen. Pressing ESC shows the above log.

I am unsure of how to fix this or even what caused this. The root partition still starts from the same and only grew to right. Is this because of the deleted swap ?

The operations were performed via GParted but I followed this : https://askubuntu.com/questions/24027/how-can-i-resize-an-ext-root-partition-at-runtime

PS: Pop 22.04 Nvidia. Relatively fresh (~3mo) install but severely miscalculated how much size I needed.

    • nestEggParrot@lemmy.sdf.orgOP
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      10 months ago

      Tried checking for systemd-boot config file to look for resume=.

      This is the most relevant config file I found and didn’t find resume on it. Am I looking at the right place ?

      ❯ sudo cat /boot/efi/loader/entries/Pop_OS-current.conf 
      title Pop!_OS
      linux /EFI/Pop_OS-f5a850fb-0b54-49f7-b84c-09d05b7d910e/vmlinuz.efi
      initrd /EFI/Pop_OS-f5a850fb-0b54-49f7-b84c-09d05b7d910e/initrd.img
      options root=UUID=f5a850fb-0b54-49f7-b84c-09d05b7d910e ro quiet loglevel=0 systemd.show_status=false splash
      

      And yes the disk repair was only one off. Didn’t get it subsequent boots.

  • regalia@literature.cafe
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    10 months ago

    The issue here is that you’re clearly running an orphanage here and keep killing off the children (processes)

  • BaroqueInMind@kbin.social
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    10 months ago

    PopOS

    There’s your problem. The solution here is to rather remind literally every single human that is capable of sapient thought that you run Arch, then install Arch. The more people you inform that you use Arch, the more stable the OS becomes. /s

    Edit: yes, also I am running Arch.