Well, after some poking around I finally solved the problem....
1. The onboard nic was not dead, just a little confused.
2. The problem was in /etc/fstab in this line
//192.168.25.105/orca /home/share cifs
file_mode=0644,dir_mode=0755,uid=1000,gid=1000,rw 0 0
I found these errors in the logs -
CIFS VFS: cifs_mount failed w/return code = -6
When I commented out the line above in /etc/fstab, everything started
working again.
The network mount was for a NAS that turned out not to work very well, so I
removed it from the network and must have forgotten to comment out that
line in /etc/fstab.
I hate it when things like that come back to haunt you years later.....
Mark
On Sun, Jan 27, 2013 at 6:18 PM, Mark Phillips
<
mark@phillipsmarketing.biz>wrote:
> Boot messages when booting into single user mode
>
> Configuring network interfaces...
> r8169 0000:01:09.0: eth1:link down
> r8169 0000:01:09.0: eth1:link down
> ADDRCONF(NETDEV_UP): eth1: link is not ready
> r8169 0000:01:09.0: eth1:link ready
> ADDRCONF(NETDEV_UP): eth1: link becomes ready
>
> and then it hangs.
>
> Thanks for any suggestions.
>
> Mark
>
>
> On Sun, Jan 27, 2013 at 5:07 PM, Mark Phillips <mark@phillipsmarketing.biz
> > wrote:
>
>> 1. I installed a new nic, an asus NX1101, and went into the bios and
>> disabled the on board network interface controller. The system booted, but
>> the network was not working.
>>
>> 2. I then edited the /etc/network/interfaces file and changed eth0 to
>> eth1 for the new nic. I then ran ifup eth1, and the network came up. I
>> could ping google.com and ssh to the box.
>>
>> 3. I rebooted the machine, and the boot process again stopped at
>> Configuring the network. I rebooted again to check if the bios had been
>> changed, and the bios still says that the on board network interface
>> controller is disabled.
>>
>> So now the new nic is enabled, but the system still hangs at trying to
>> configure the network.
>>
>> Anyone have any ideas?
>>
>> Thanks,
>>
>> Mark
>>
>>
>>
>> On Sun, Jan 27, 2013 at 12:04 PM, Matt Graham <danceswithcrows@usa.net>wrote:
>>
>>> From: Mark Phillips <mark@phillipsmarketing.biz>
>>> > There was an ATI Rage 128 video card in the system, and the the newer
>>> > Debians do not have the radeon drivers.
>>>
>>> That shouldn't have caused any problems. Rage 128 cards use the r128 X
>>> module, not the radeon one. Why is Debian not including the radeon
>>> modules?
>>> That just seems weird and counterproductive, since so many machines out
>>> there
>>> have video cards driven by that module. And if it's headless, it should
>>> probably be starting up without X, in a VGA text console or vesafb, so
>>> that
>>> the video card is completely irrelevant.
>>>
>>> > However, the system hangs when trying to start network services.
>>> > [10.184481] e1000: eth0 NIC Link is UP 1000 Mbps Full Duplex, Flow
>>> > Control: RX/TX
>>> > [10.187930] ADDRCONF(NETDEV_CHANGE): eth0: link becomes ready
>>> >
>>> > Then nothing is printed out and the system does not respond.
>>> > The card is the internal NIC - I don't have any extra cards in the
>>> > machine.
>>>
>>> Take a random PCI NIC you have lying around. Put that NIC in the
>>> machine. Go
>>> into the machine's BIOS Setup and disable the internal NIC. If you do
>>> that,
>>> and the thing boots normally, then the machine's internal NIC is hosed.
>>> BTDT.
>>> NIC failure *can* happen, it's just sort of rare since there aren't any
>>> moving parts.
>>>
>>> Or the new kernel has some sort of weird bug with its e1000 module.
>>> Distro
>>> kernels seem to have more weird bugs than vanilla kernels, for some
>>> reason.
>>> You could test this by booting with the rescue system's option for "no
>>> network", then if it comes up, and you modprobe e1000 and it immediately
>>> locks
>>> up, that may be the problem.
>>>
>>> --
>>> Matt G / Dances With Crows
>>> The Crow202 Blog: http://crow202.org/wordpress/
>>> There is no Darkness in Eternity/But only Light too dim for us to see
>>>
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>>>
>>
>>
>
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