Persuading the boot loader to switch the screen into, say, 50 line mode would be one way of doing this. Without it, you cannot fully diagnose this problem beyond some unknown program did something unknown that caused an illegal instruction signal to be raised. You need to find out what was printed that has scrolled off the top of your screen. It could be Comm: sh, or Comm: init, or even Comm: run-init as in the AskUbuntu question that you linked to in your question. This panic screen - which you have not transcribed in full in your question but really should so that the text will be indexed and people will find it in the future - is the panic screen that results when process #1 exits after not handling signal #4 (illegal instruction).Īs I just explained at, some of the important information has scrolled off your screen, namely the Comm: line that tells us what program was running as process #1.
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