The "toram" workaround does not work for me attempting to boot on a SuperMicro X10DRW motherboard with 128GB of ram installed + SATA SSD. I have also added Woodrow Shen's workaround in the command line.
The difference is that I am attempting to install 18.04 server.
Environment is:
Debian "Wheezy" server runnig dnsmasq to provide DHCP and tftp service
Synced/mirrored Ubuntu 18.04 repository being served via nginx
-----
May 29 18:08:13 ubuntu systemd[1]: dev-mqueue.mount: Mount process finished, but there is no mount.
May 29 18:08:13 ubuntu systemd[1]: dev-mqueue.mount: Failed with result 'protocol'.
May 29 18:08:13 ubuntu systemd[1]: Failed to mount POSIX Message Queue File System.
-- Subject: Unit dev-mqueue.mount has failed
-- Defined-By: systemd
-- Support: http://www.ubuntu.com/support
--
-- Unit dev-mqueue.mount has failed.
The "toram" workaround does not work for me attempting to boot on a SuperMicro X10DRW motherboard with 128GB of ram installed + SATA SSD. I have also added Woodrow Shen's workaround in the command line.
The difference is that I am attempting to install 18.04 server.
Environment is:
Debian "Wheezy" server runnig dnsmasq to provide DHCP and tftp service
Synced/mirrored Ubuntu 18.04 repository being served via nginx
-----
May 29 18:08:13 ubuntu systemd[1]: dev-mqueue.mount: Mount process finished, but there is no mount. www.ubuntu. com/support
May 29 18:08:13 ubuntu systemd[1]: dev-mqueue.mount: Failed with result 'protocol'.
May 29 18:08:13 ubuntu systemd[1]: Failed to mount POSIX Message Queue File System.
-- Subject: Unit dev-mqueue.mount has failed
-- Defined-By: systemd
-- Support: http://
--
-- Unit dev-mqueue.mount has failed.