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initramfs will attempt to resume from /dev/sda8 (why is this message and should I set RESUME)


Can't boot 12.04 installed alongside Windows 7The volume boot has only 40mb disk space remainingCannot Restore Grub After Windows 8.1 UpgradeTrying to add Windows 7 to grub2Added one extra drive, old dual boot stopped workingKubuntu does not boot properly(very slow) after increasing the size of root partition






.everyoneloves__top-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__mid-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__bot-mid-leaderboard:empty
margin-bottom:0;









0


















Mine is a dual boot ASUS running Windows and Ubuntu 19.04. I got a the below message on executing apt-get upgrade. Not sure what to do. Pl advice.



I: The initramfs will attempt to resume from /dev/sda8

I: (UUID=9f45488a-dd0a-45f6-9227-3c76bf5349ca)

I: Set the RESUME variable to override this.```



Part of fdisk output below


Device Start End Sectors Size Type


/dev/sda1 2048 923647 921600 450M Windows recovery environment

/dev/sda2 923648 1128447 204800 100M EFI System

/dev/sda3 1128448 1161215 32768 16M Microsoft reserved

/dev/sda4 1161216 204802047 203640832 97.1G Microsoft basic data

/dev/sda5 204802048 1023999999 819197952 390.6G Microsoft basic data

/dev/sda6 1024002048 1419223853 395221806 188.5G Microsoft basic data

/dev/sda7 1419225088 1419227135 2048 1M BIOS boot

/dev/sda8 1920106496 1953523711 33417216 16G Linux swap

/dev/sda9 1419227136 1920106495 500879360 238.9G Linux filesystem

Background: The system just was recovered after several GRUB errors and boot-repair. I don't this innocent looking message to screw up everything again.
Pl help.









share|improve this question































    0


















    Mine is a dual boot ASUS running Windows and Ubuntu 19.04. I got a the below message on executing apt-get upgrade. Not sure what to do. Pl advice.



    I: The initramfs will attempt to resume from /dev/sda8

    I: (UUID=9f45488a-dd0a-45f6-9227-3c76bf5349ca)

    I: Set the RESUME variable to override this.```



    Part of fdisk output below


    Device Start End Sectors Size Type


    /dev/sda1 2048 923647 921600 450M Windows recovery environment

    /dev/sda2 923648 1128447 204800 100M EFI System

    /dev/sda3 1128448 1161215 32768 16M Microsoft reserved

    /dev/sda4 1161216 204802047 203640832 97.1G Microsoft basic data

    /dev/sda5 204802048 1023999999 819197952 390.6G Microsoft basic data

    /dev/sda6 1024002048 1419223853 395221806 188.5G Microsoft basic data

    /dev/sda7 1419225088 1419227135 2048 1M BIOS boot

    /dev/sda8 1920106496 1953523711 33417216 16G Linux swap

    /dev/sda9 1419227136 1920106495 500879360 238.9G Linux filesystem

    Background: The system just was recovered after several GRUB errors and boot-repair. I don't this innocent looking message to screw up everything again.
    Pl help.









    share|improve this question



























      0













      0









      0








      Mine is a dual boot ASUS running Windows and Ubuntu 19.04. I got a the below message on executing apt-get upgrade. Not sure what to do. Pl advice.



      I: The initramfs will attempt to resume from /dev/sda8

      I: (UUID=9f45488a-dd0a-45f6-9227-3c76bf5349ca)

      I: Set the RESUME variable to override this.```



      Part of fdisk output below


      Device Start End Sectors Size Type


      /dev/sda1 2048 923647 921600 450M Windows recovery environment

      /dev/sda2 923648 1128447 204800 100M EFI System

      /dev/sda3 1128448 1161215 32768 16M Microsoft reserved

      /dev/sda4 1161216 204802047 203640832 97.1G Microsoft basic data

      /dev/sda5 204802048 1023999999 819197952 390.6G Microsoft basic data

      /dev/sda6 1024002048 1419223853 395221806 188.5G Microsoft basic data

      /dev/sda7 1419225088 1419227135 2048 1M BIOS boot

      /dev/sda8 1920106496 1953523711 33417216 16G Linux swap

      /dev/sda9 1419227136 1920106495 500879360 238.9G Linux filesystem

      Background: The system just was recovered after several GRUB errors and boot-repair. I don't this innocent looking message to screw up everything again.
      Pl help.









      share|improve this question














      Mine is a dual boot ASUS running Windows and Ubuntu 19.04. I got a the below message on executing apt-get upgrade. Not sure what to do. Pl advice.



      I: The initramfs will attempt to resume from /dev/sda8

      I: (UUID=9f45488a-dd0a-45f6-9227-3c76bf5349ca)

      I: Set the RESUME variable to override this.```



      Part of fdisk output below


      Device Start End Sectors Size Type


      /dev/sda1 2048 923647 921600 450M Windows recovery environment

      /dev/sda2 923648 1128447 204800 100M EFI System

      /dev/sda3 1128448 1161215 32768 16M Microsoft reserved

      /dev/sda4 1161216 204802047 203640832 97.1G Microsoft basic data

      /dev/sda5 204802048 1023999999 819197952 390.6G Microsoft basic data

      /dev/sda6 1024002048 1419223853 395221806 188.5G Microsoft basic data

      /dev/sda7 1419225088 1419227135 2048 1M BIOS boot

      /dev/sda8 1920106496 1953523711 33417216 16G Linux swap

      /dev/sda9 1419227136 1920106495 500879360 238.9G Linux filesystem

      Background: The system just was recovered after several GRUB errors and boot-repair. I don't this innocent looking message to screw up everything again.
      Pl help.






      boot bootloader






      share|improve this question













      share|improve this question











      share|improve this question




      share|improve this question










      asked Aug 13 at 5:09









      emeralddoveemeralddove

      1112 bronze badges




      1112 bronze badges























          1 Answer
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          0



















          Do you want your system to be able to resume or not?



          If not, create /etc/initramfs-tools/conf.d/resume with the contents:



          RESUME=none





          share|improve this answer




























          • I forgot my markdown. Just have one line in the file with 'RESUME=none' (without the single quotes).

            – zsd
            Sep 4 at 17:19






          • 1





            Welcome to Ask Ubuntu! I've improved the formatting. In case you weren't sure how to edit: you can edit any of your own posts by clicking the edit link that appears under it. Here's a quick guide to formatting. (You can also propose edits to improve posts other users wrote. Unlike edits to your own posts, which are applied immediately, those edits will be reviewed by others before being applied. Once you reach 2000 reputation, most of your edits no longer require review.)

            – Eliah Kagan
            Sep 4 at 17:35












          • Thanks for answering. After quite a bit of deliberation, I attempted to reinstall and ended up repairing Ubuntu installation. That helped reviving things. I am not sure if this is a 'solution' per se and hence did not suggest it as an answer.

            – emeralddove
            Sep 12 at 10:52












          Your Answer








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          active

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          0



















          Do you want your system to be able to resume or not?



          If not, create /etc/initramfs-tools/conf.d/resume with the contents:



          RESUME=none





          share|improve this answer




























          • I forgot my markdown. Just have one line in the file with 'RESUME=none' (without the single quotes).

            – zsd
            Sep 4 at 17:19






          • 1





            Welcome to Ask Ubuntu! I've improved the formatting. In case you weren't sure how to edit: you can edit any of your own posts by clicking the edit link that appears under it. Here's a quick guide to formatting. (You can also propose edits to improve posts other users wrote. Unlike edits to your own posts, which are applied immediately, those edits will be reviewed by others before being applied. Once you reach 2000 reputation, most of your edits no longer require review.)

            – Eliah Kagan
            Sep 4 at 17:35












          • Thanks for answering. After quite a bit of deliberation, I attempted to reinstall and ended up repairing Ubuntu installation. That helped reviving things. I am not sure if this is a 'solution' per se and hence did not suggest it as an answer.

            – emeralddove
            Sep 12 at 10:52















          0



















          Do you want your system to be able to resume or not?



          If not, create /etc/initramfs-tools/conf.d/resume with the contents:



          RESUME=none





          share|improve this answer




























          • I forgot my markdown. Just have one line in the file with 'RESUME=none' (without the single quotes).

            – zsd
            Sep 4 at 17:19






          • 1





            Welcome to Ask Ubuntu! I've improved the formatting. In case you weren't sure how to edit: you can edit any of your own posts by clicking the edit link that appears under it. Here's a quick guide to formatting. (You can also propose edits to improve posts other users wrote. Unlike edits to your own posts, which are applied immediately, those edits will be reviewed by others before being applied. Once you reach 2000 reputation, most of your edits no longer require review.)

            – Eliah Kagan
            Sep 4 at 17:35












          • Thanks for answering. After quite a bit of deliberation, I attempted to reinstall and ended up repairing Ubuntu installation. That helped reviving things. I am not sure if this is a 'solution' per se and hence did not suggest it as an answer.

            – emeralddove
            Sep 12 at 10:52













          0















          0











          0









          Do you want your system to be able to resume or not?



          If not, create /etc/initramfs-tools/conf.d/resume with the contents:



          RESUME=none





          share|improve this answer
















          Do you want your system to be able to resume or not?



          If not, create /etc/initramfs-tools/conf.d/resume with the contents:



          RESUME=none






          share|improve this answer















          share|improve this answer




          share|improve this answer








          edited Sep 4 at 17:27









          Eliah Kagan

          95.1k25 gold badges256 silver badges409 bronze badges




          95.1k25 gold badges256 silver badges409 bronze badges










          answered Sep 4 at 17:18









          zsdzsd

          1




          1















          • I forgot my markdown. Just have one line in the file with 'RESUME=none' (without the single quotes).

            – zsd
            Sep 4 at 17:19






          • 1





            Welcome to Ask Ubuntu! I've improved the formatting. In case you weren't sure how to edit: you can edit any of your own posts by clicking the edit link that appears under it. Here's a quick guide to formatting. (You can also propose edits to improve posts other users wrote. Unlike edits to your own posts, which are applied immediately, those edits will be reviewed by others before being applied. Once you reach 2000 reputation, most of your edits no longer require review.)

            – Eliah Kagan
            Sep 4 at 17:35












          • Thanks for answering. After quite a bit of deliberation, I attempted to reinstall and ended up repairing Ubuntu installation. That helped reviving things. I am not sure if this is a 'solution' per se and hence did not suggest it as an answer.

            – emeralddove
            Sep 12 at 10:52

















          • I forgot my markdown. Just have one line in the file with 'RESUME=none' (without the single quotes).

            – zsd
            Sep 4 at 17:19






          • 1





            Welcome to Ask Ubuntu! I've improved the formatting. In case you weren't sure how to edit: you can edit any of your own posts by clicking the edit link that appears under it. Here's a quick guide to formatting. (You can also propose edits to improve posts other users wrote. Unlike edits to your own posts, which are applied immediately, those edits will be reviewed by others before being applied. Once you reach 2000 reputation, most of your edits no longer require review.)

            – Eliah Kagan
            Sep 4 at 17:35












          • Thanks for answering. After quite a bit of deliberation, I attempted to reinstall and ended up repairing Ubuntu installation. That helped reviving things. I am not sure if this is a 'solution' per se and hence did not suggest it as an answer.

            – emeralddove
            Sep 12 at 10:52
















          I forgot my markdown. Just have one line in the file with 'RESUME=none' (without the single quotes).

          – zsd
          Sep 4 at 17:19





          I forgot my markdown. Just have one line in the file with 'RESUME=none' (without the single quotes).

          – zsd
          Sep 4 at 17:19




          1




          1





          Welcome to Ask Ubuntu! I've improved the formatting. In case you weren't sure how to edit: you can edit any of your own posts by clicking the edit link that appears under it. Here's a quick guide to formatting. (You can also propose edits to improve posts other users wrote. Unlike edits to your own posts, which are applied immediately, those edits will be reviewed by others before being applied. Once you reach 2000 reputation, most of your edits no longer require review.)

          – Eliah Kagan
          Sep 4 at 17:35






          Welcome to Ask Ubuntu! I've improved the formatting. In case you weren't sure how to edit: you can edit any of your own posts by clicking the edit link that appears under it. Here's a quick guide to formatting. (You can also propose edits to improve posts other users wrote. Unlike edits to your own posts, which are applied immediately, those edits will be reviewed by others before being applied. Once you reach 2000 reputation, most of your edits no longer require review.)

          – Eliah Kagan
          Sep 4 at 17:35














          Thanks for answering. After quite a bit of deliberation, I attempted to reinstall and ended up repairing Ubuntu installation. That helped reviving things. I am not sure if this is a 'solution' per se and hence did not suggest it as an answer.

          – emeralddove
          Sep 12 at 10:52





          Thanks for answering. After quite a bit of deliberation, I attempted to reinstall and ended up repairing Ubuntu installation. That helped reviving things. I am not sure if this is a 'solution' per se and hence did not suggest it as an answer.

          – emeralddove
          Sep 12 at 10:52


















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