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    Alix2d3 - can't upgrade from 2.1_RC0 to RC1

    Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved 2.1 Snapshot Feedback and Problems - RETIRED
    33 Posts 8 Posters 6.8k Views
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    • E
      edmund
      last edited by

      Have you tried removing all the packages from the installation?  I assume that the V2 release is much larger than the older V1 release because I've found that AVAHI will not build under 2.0 and the traffic shaper crashes under 2.0.  If 2.1 doesn't fix these issues then it's probably time to toss the nano version.

      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
      • L
        louis-m
        last edited by

        it's a bit long but here is the upgrade log:

        NanoBSD Firmware upgrade in progress…

        Installing /root/latest.tgz.
        SLICE         2
        OLDSLICE      1
        TOFLASH       ad0s2
        COMPLETE_PATH ad0s2a
        GLABEL_SLICE  pfsense1
        Wed Aug  7 07:07:18 BST 2013

        total 8
        dr-xr-xr-x   8 root  wheel         512B Aug  4 21:57 .
        drwxr-xr-x  24 root  wheel         512B Aug  4 21:58 ..
        crw-r-----   1 root  operator    0,  56 Aug  4 21:57 ad0
        crw-r-----   1 root  operator    0,  57 Aug  4 21:57 ad0s1
        crw-r-----   1 root  operator    0,  60 Aug  4 21:57 ad0s1a
        crw-r-----   1 root  operator    0,  58 Aug  6 17:31 ad0s2
        crw-r-----   1 root  operator    0,  78 Aug  6 17:31 ad0s2a
        crw-r-----   1 root  operator    0,  59 Aug  4 21:57 ad0s3
        crw-------   1 root  operator    0,  28 Aug  4 21:57 ata
        crw-------   1 root  wheel       0,  11 Aug  7 07:07 bpf
        lrwxr-xr-x   1 root  wheel           3B Aug  4 21:57 bpf0 -> bpf
        crw-------   1 root  tty         0,   4 Aug  7 07:07 console
        crw-rw-rw-   1 root  wheel       0,  44 Aug  4 21:57 crypto
        crw-rw-rw-   1 root  wheel       0,  10 Aug  4 21:57 ctty
        crw-rw----   1 uucp  dialer      0,  35 Aug  4 21:57 cuau0
        crw-rw----   1 uucp  dialer      0,  36 Aug  4 21:57 cuau0.init
        crw-rw----   1 uucp  dialer      0,  37 Aug  4 21:57 cuau0.lock
        crw-rw----   1 uucp  dialer      0,  41 Aug  4 21:57 cuau1
        crw-rw----   1 uucp  dialer      0,  42 Aug  4 21:57 cuau1.init
        crw-rw----   1 uucp  dialer      0,  43 Aug  4 21:57 cuau1.lock
        crw-------   1 root  wheel       0,   5 Aug  4 21:57 devctl
        cr--------   1 root  wheel       0,  54 Aug  4 21:57 devstat
        dr-xr-xr-x   2 root  wheel         512B Aug  4 21:57 fd
        crw-------   1 root  wheel       0,  13 Aug  4 21:57 fido
        crw-r-----   1 root  operator    0,   3 Aug  4 21:57 geom.ctl
        crw-------   1 root  wheel       0,  23 Aug  4 21:57 io
        crw-------   1 root  wheel       0,   8 Aug  4 21:57 klog
        crw-r-----   1 root  kmem        0,  15 Aug  4 21:57 kmem
        dr-xr-xr-x   2 root  wheel         512B Aug  4 21:57 led
        crw-r-----   1 root  operator    0,  62 Aug  4 21:58 md0
        crw-r-----   1 root  operator    0,  64 Aug  4 21:58 md1
        crw-------   1 root  wheel       0,  47 Aug  4 21:57 mdctl
        crw-r-----   1 root  kmem        0,  14 Aug  4 21:57 mem
        crw-------   1 root  kmem        0,  16 Aug  4 21:57 nfslock
        crw-rw-rw-   1 root  wheel       0,  25 Aug  7 07:07 null
        crw-r--r--   1 root  wheel       0,  27 Aug  4 21:57 pci
        crw-rw----   1 root  proxy       0,  45 Aug  4 21:57 pf
        crw-rw-rw-   1 root  wheel       0,   9 Aug  4 21:57 ptmx
        dr-xr-xr-x   2 root  wheel         512B Aug  4 22:31 pts
        crw-rw-rw-   1 root  wheel       0,   6 Aug  4 21:57 random
        crw-------   1 root  wheel       0,  24 Aug  4 21:57 speaker
        lrwxr-xr-x   1 root  wheel           4B Aug  4 21:57 stderr -> fd/2
        lrwxr-xr-x   1 root  wheel           4B Aug  4 21:57 stdin -> fd/0
        lrwxr-xr-x   1 root  wheel           4B Aug  4 21:57 stdout -> fd/1
        crw-------   1 root  wheel       0,  32 Aug  4 21:57 ttyu0
        crw-------   1 root  wheel       0,  33 Aug  4 21:57 ttyu0.init
        crw-------   1 root  wheel       0,  34 Aug  4 21:57 ttyu0.lock
        crw-------   1 root  wheel       0,  38 Aug  4 21:57 ttyu1
        crw-------   1 root  wheel       0,  39 Aug  4 21:57 ttyu1.init
        crw-------   1 root  wheel       0,  40 Aug  4 21:57 ttyu1.lock
        crw-------   1 uucp  dialer      0,  72 Aug  4 21:58 tun1
        dr-xr-xr-x   2 root  wheel         512B Aug  4 21:57 ufs
        dr-xr-xr-x   2 root  wheel         512B Aug  4 21:57 ufsid
        lrwxr-xr-x   1 root  wheel           9B Aug  4 21:57 ugen0.1 -> usb/0.1.0
        lrwxr-xr-x   1 root  wheel           9B Aug  4 21:57 ugen1.1 -> usb/1.1.0
        lrwxr-xr-x   1 root  wheel           6B Aug  4 21:57 urandom -> random
        dr-xr-xr-x   2 root  wheel         512B Aug  4 21:57 usb
        crw-r--r--   1 root  operator    0,  46 Aug  4 21:57 usbctl
        crw-------   1 root  operator    0,  55 Aug  4 21:57 xpt0
        crw-rw-rw-   1 root  wheel       0,  26 Aug  4 21:57 zero

        -rw-r--r--  1 root  wheel    78M Aug  7 07:05 /root/latest.tgz

        MD5 (/root/latest.tgz) = 9697bd6338477034e2fbb8ad53e5ee33

        /dev/ufs/pfsense1 on / (ufs, local, noatime, synchronous)
        devfs on /dev (devfs, local)
        /dev/ufs/cf on /cf (ufs, local, noatime, synchronous)
        /dev/md0 on /tmp (ufs, local)
        /dev/md1 on /var (ufs, local)
        devfs on /var/dhcpd/dev (devfs, local)

        last pid: 23896;  load averages:  1.43,  0.61,  0.29  up 2+09:09:25    07:07:23
        50 processes:  1 running, 49 sleeping

        Mem: 77M Active, 76M Inact, 61M Wired, 3072K Cache, 33M Buf, 13M Free
        Swap:

        PID USERNAME      THR PRI NICE   SIZE    RES STATE    TIME   WCPU COMMAND
        68586 root            1  76   20  3644K  1312K wait     1:51  0.00% sh
        40230 root            1  64   20  3264K  1220K select   1:18  0.00% apinger
        99879 nobody          1  44    0  5512K  2412K select   0:46  0.00% dnsmasq
        64552 zabbix          1  64   20  4532K  1676K nanslp   0:43  0.00% zabbix_agentd
        2041 root            1  76    0 35808K 24784K accept   0:26  0.00% php
        7528 dhcpd           1  44    0 11456K  7672K select   0:23  0.00% dhcpd
        27023 root            1  64   20  6280K  6300K select   0:21  0.00% ntpd
         295 root            1  76   20  3352K  1124K kqread   0:21  0.00% check_reload_status
        94442 root            1  44    0  9028K  6204K kqread   0:16  0.00% lighttpd
        92451 root            1  64   20  7156K  5876K select   0:07  0.00% bsnmpd
        22827 root            1  44    0  5868K  1920K bpf      0:06  0.00% tcpdump
        2353 root            1  64    0 35808K 24664K accept   0:05  0.00% php
        9531 root            1  44    0  7880K  2944K select   0:05  0.00% mpd5
         771 root            1  64   20  5808K  2280K kqread   0:04  0.00% master
        49622 root            1  76   20  3356K  1316K nanslp   0:03  0.00% cron
        66845 root            1  64   20  5432K  3112K select   0:03  0.00% openvpn
        5502 root            1  64   20  3412K  1404K select   0:03  0.00% syslogd
        8075 root            1  44    0  3264K  1764K kqread   0:03  0.00% dhcpleases

        NanoBSD upgrade starting

        dd if=/dev/zero of=/dev/ad0s2 bs=1m count=1
        1+0 records in
        1+0 records out
        1048576 bytes transferred in 0.204044 secs (5138967 bytes/sec)

        /usr/bin/gzip -dc /root/latest.tgz | /bin/dd of=/dev/ad0s2 obs=64k
        3844449+0 records in
        30034+1 records out
        1968357888 bytes transferred in 355.340421 secs (5539358 bytes/sec)
        After upgrade fdisk/bsdlabel

        /sbin/fsck_ufs -y /dev/ad0s2a
        ** /dev/ad0s2a
        ** Last Mounted on /tmp/builder/_.mnt
        ** Phase 1 - Check Blocks and Sizes
        ** Phase 2 - Check Pathnames
        ** Phase 3 - Check Connectivity
        ** Phase 4 - Check Reference Counts
        ** Phase 5 - Check Cyl groups
        6322 files, 334070 used, 3445958 free (670 frags, 430661 blocks, 0.0% fragmentation)

        ***** FILE SYSTEM IS CLEAN *****

        /sbin/tunefs -L pfsense1 /dev/ad0s2a
        Checking for post_upgrade_command...

        File list:
        /tmp/pfsense1
        /tmp/pfsense1/.snap

        YADA….. YADA..... no errors in the files

        Misc log:
        fdisk: invalid fdisk partition table found
        bsdlabel: /dev/ad0s3: no valid label found
        bsdlabel: /dev/ad0s3: no valid label found
        mount: /dev/ufs/pfsense1 : Device busy
        cp: /tmp/pfsense1/etc/fstab: No such file or directory
        sed: /tmp/pfsense1/etc/fstab: No such file or directory
        umount: /tmp/pfsense1: not a file system root directory

        fdisk/bsdlabel log:

        Before upgrade fdisk/bsdlabel
        ******* Working on device /dev/ad0 *******
        parameters extracted from in-core disklabel are:
        cylinders=8146 heads=16 sectors/track=63 (1008 blks/cyl)

        Figures below won't work with BIOS for partitions not in cyl 1
        parameters to be used for BIOS calculations are:
        cylinders=8146 heads=16 sectors/track=63 (1008 blks/cyl)

        Media sector size is 512
        Warning: BIOS sector numbering starts with sector 1
        Information from DOS bootblock is:
        The data for partition 1 is:
        sysid 165 (0xa5),(FreeBSD/NetBSD/386BSD)
           start 63, size 3861585 (1885 Meg), flag 80 (active)
        beg: cyl 0/ head 1/ sector 1;
        end: cyl 758/ head 15/ sector 63
        The data for partition 2 is:
        sysid 165 (0xa5),(FreeBSD/NetBSD/386BSD)
           start 3861711, size 3861585 (1885 Meg), flag 0
        beg: cyl 759/ head 1/ sector 1;
        end: cyl 493/ head 15/ sector 63
        The data for partition 3 is:
        sysid 165 (0xa5),(FreeBSD/NetBSD/386BSD)
           start 7723296, size 102816 (50 Meg), flag 0
        beg: cyl 494/ head 0/ sector 1;
        end: cyl 595/ head 15/ sector 63
        The data for partition 4 is:
        <unused># /dev/ad0s1:
        type: unknown
        disk: amnesiac
        label:
        flags:
        bytes/sector: 512
        sectors/track: 63
        tracks/cylinder: 16
        sectors/cylinder: 1008
        cylinders: 3813
        sectors/unit: 3844449
        rpm: 3600
        interleave: 1
        trackskew: 0
        cylinderskew: 0
        headswitch: 0 # milliseconds
        track-to-track seek: 0 # milliseconds
        drivedata: 0

        8 partitions:

        size     offset    fstype   [fsize bsize bps/cpg]

        a:    3844433         16    unused        0     0  
         c:    3844449          0    unused        0     0     # "raw" part, don't edit

        /dev/ad0s2:

        type: unknown
        disk: amnesiac
        label:
        flags:
        bytes/sector: 512
        sectors/track: 63
        tracks/cylinder: 16
        sectors/cylinder: 1008
        cylinders: 3813
        sectors/unit: 3844449
        rpm: 3600
        interleave: 1
        trackskew: 0
        cylinderskew: 0
        headswitch: 0 # milliseconds
        track-to-track seek: 0 # milliseconds
        drivedata: 0

        8 partitions:

        size     offset    fstype   [fsize bsize bps/cpg]

        a:    3844433         16    unused        0     0  
         c:    3844449          0    unused        0     0     # "raw" part, don't edit
        –-------------------------------------------------------------

        Any idea's on that error? Strange that the disk is saying it's ok and then coming up with invalid disk partition....</unused>

        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
        • W
          wallabybob
          last edited by

          @louis-m:

          Any idea's on that error? Strange that the disk is saying it's ok and then coming up with invalid disk partition….

          First some names: The Master Boot Record (MBR) allows for 4 partitions. FreeBSD calls these slices. Each slice that specifies it is a FreeBSD slice then has a BSD label and FreeBSD partitions. A device name such as /dev/ad0s2a indicates FreeBSD partition "a" within FreeBSD slice 2 on ATA disk ad0.

          Your log indicates slice 1 and 2 are OK, but slice doesn't appear to have a valid BSD label.

          If I recall correctly nanoBSD should have 3 slices: one of which is used for configuration information so that information can be easily shared by the other two slices.

          @louis-m:

          fdisk: invalid fdisk partition table found
          bsdlabel: /dev/ad0s3: no valid label found
          bsdlabel: /dev/ad0s3: no valid label found
          mount: /dev/ufs/pfsense1 : Device busy
          cp: /tmp/pfsense1/etc/fstab: No such file or directory
          sed: /tmp/pfsense1/etc/fstab: No such file or directory
          umount: /tmp/pfsense1: not a file system root directory

          Note the problem is reported on slice 3 which is not reported in the disklabel log.

          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
          • L
            louis-m
            last edited by

            Do you know how to fix this? Is it an edit in the shell?

            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
            • D
              doktornotor Banned
              last edited by

              @louis-m:

              Do you know how to fix this? Is it an edit in the shell?

              Uh. Rewrite the image to the card, restore configuration backup? (Note: I definitely am not convinced the card is OK, frankly I'd just dump it.)

              1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
              • K
                Klaws
                last edited by

                fsck is not a sure-fire way to detect CF card errors (well, the same is true for SSDs and traditional HDs).

                Had a suddenly appearing, strange issue with port forwarding once. Replaced the CF card. Issue solved.

                1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                • jimpJ
                  jimp Rebel Alliance Developer Netgate
                  last edited by

                  Some of those "invalid" type errors are fine and expected during an upgrade.

                  The "busy" one is what catches my eye. That means something already has that slice mounted or open and is trying to work on it when it shouldn't.

                  Have you rebooted the ALIX between upgrade attempts?

                  Remember: Upvote with the 👍 button for any user/post you find to be helpful, informative, or deserving of recognition!

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                  1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                  • L
                    louis-m
                    last edited by

                    yes, removed packages. rebooted etc. not sure what's going on with it.

                    1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                    • jimpJ
                      jimp Rebel Alliance Developer Netgate
                      last edited by

                      When in doubt, wipe it and reload the card (or replace it, ideally). It could have been done already. :-)

                      Remember: Upvote with the 👍 button for any user/post you find to be helpful, informative, or deserving of recognition!

                      Need help fast? Netgate Global Support!

                      Do not Chat/PM for help!

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                      • K
                        Klaws
                        last edited by

                        @kejianshi:

                        "Industrial Grade" isn't a spec, although sellers like you to think it is.

                        Actually, it is (for electronics used in aerospace and military environments). Typical grades are:

                        Commercial grade: 0 °C to 70 °C
                        Industrial grade: -40 °C to 85 °C
                        Military grade: -55 °C to 125 °C

                        According to my experience, the higher the advertized grade is, the more likely it is you are facing a counterfeit product with low-quality electrnoics inside (typically lower than that of standard versions). YMMV.

                        if the original poster insists that his pfSense box needs to be operated in the temperature range between 70°C and 85°C, then the CF card is not the problem. The problem is that the ALIX board has an operating temperature range of 0°C-50°C only.

                        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                        • L
                          louis-m
                          last edited by

                          I only got industrial grade because I was told it handled more writes before failing and a normal card would probably only last a year or two if I was writing logs etc to it.

                          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                          • K
                            kejianshi
                            last edited by

                            Temperature…  Now thats a spec I can relate to.

                            For frequent writes, I would have to have SLC but I'd still avoid frequent writes.

                            This forum is absolutely full of "My SSD / Flash crashed" threads.

                            Personally, I still trust HDD so much more in most cases.

                            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                            • K
                              Klaws
                              last edited by

                              @louis-m:

                              I only got industrial grade because I was told it handled more writes before failing and a normal card would probably only last a year or two if I was writing logs etc to it.

                              Um….remote logging?

                              I don't know how frequently data gets written when a non-embedded version is used, but assuming one write once a minute means 1440 writes per day. Without TRIM support, wear levelling is quite limited in effect.

                              CF cards can also fail for other reasons. In my case, the failure occured after a power surge (which fried the power supply). Nope, not my WRAP, not my office, not my infrastructure!

                              1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                              • K
                                kejianshi
                                last edited by

                                I still stick to my statement that if you just must write to these frequently that SLC is the only way to go.

                                Get yourself a few of these.  If you can break them, you are good at breaking stuff.

                                http://www.comx-computers.co.za/TS16GCF100I-P-specifications-70564.htm

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