Still got system messages on boot
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I've followed various guides to suppress the system text - sometimes when I boot I see no text at all, straight into video splash and ES; other times I get this lot. Can I take any further steps to stop this? Also not sure why usbmount is failing, as its definitely actually working! Image
I can provide logging if required
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To hide the startup messages from
systemd
, you can addquiet
at the end of/boot/cmdline.txt
. I think that's covered in the docs. The failure message fromusbmount
is benign and it can be ignored (sda
doesn't contains an actual filesystem since it's the whole disc,sda1
is auto-mounted). -
Wow I didn't know you could do that. I will have to try it. That should make it a much more clean look on boot.
EDIT: Love it. Nice little touch to add to my setup. :)
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With verbose mode it is possible to identify possible failures during startup or after loading the operating system. If it were you, I wouldn't break the first rule of emulation ...
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@wmarcio The first rule? As in it's bad to hide away all messages?
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@mitu Thanks, I'll go through docs again and see if there's anything I've missed. Ideally I'd like to kill ALL messages for a clean look. Sometimes I do get none, at other times I'll get them on initial boot and between splash video and ES loading screen
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@wmarcio said in Still got system messages on boot:
If it were you, I wouldn't break the first rule of emulation ...
"Never actually play the games if you could do some more tinkering instead?" ๐
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@Clyde lol this is so true.
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@sad_muso said in Still got system messages on boot:
@wmarcio The first rule? As in it's bad to hide away all messages?
First rule of emulation: don't mess with where it's working.
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@wmarcio said in Still got system messages on boot:
@sad_muso said in Still got system messages on boot:
@wmarcio The first rule? As in it's bad to hide away all messages?
First rule of emulation: don't mess with where it's working.
Hell that's why I use RetroPie! It's to mess with everything. Worst case scenario I restore my 128GB card with the backup I make before I screw around with everything. :)
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@ClassicGMR That's another rule: "Never do anything stupid without a backup (including not making the backup)."
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