+++ date = 2024-02-13 title = "Stuck in Ubuntu's Emergency Mode? Try Fixing the Fstab File" description = "" draft = false +++ # The Problem I recently [migrated my hard drives to a ZFS pool](../zfs/) and found myself stuck in Ubuntu's emergency mode after the first reboot I performed after creating the ZFS pool. My server was stuck in the boot process and showed the following error on the screen: ```txt You are in emergency mode. After logging in, type "journalctl -xb" to view system logs, "systemctl reboot" to reboot, "systemctl default" or ^D to try again to boot into default mode". ``` After rebooting the server and watching the logs scroll on a monitor, I noticed the root cause was related to a very long search for certain drives. I kept seeing errors like this: ```txt [ TIME ] Timed out waiting of device dev-disk-by/[disk-uuid] ``` I realized that I had not removed the `/etc/fstab` references that asked Ubuntu to mount two disks on boot, but I had recently changed those disks to be part of my ZFS pool instead. Therefore, Ubuntu was trying to identify and mount a disk that was not available. Now that we have an idea of the issue, let's move to solution. # The Solution In order to fix the issue, I waited until I was allowed to type the root user's password, and then I executed the following command: ```sh nano /etc/fstab ``` Within the `fstab` file, I needed to comment/remove the following lines at the bottom of the file. You can comment-out a line by prepending a `#` symbol at the beginning of the line. You can also delete the line entirely. ```conf # What it looked like when running into the issue: UUID=B64E53824E5339F7 /mnt/white-01 ntfs-3g uid=1000,gid=1000 0 0 UUID=E69867E59867B32B /mnt/white-02 ntfs-3g uid=1000,gid=1000 0 0 # What I changed it to, in order to fix the issue: # UUID=B64E53824E5339F7 /mnt/white-01 ntfs-3g uid=1000,gid=1000 0 0 # UUID=E69867E59867B32B /mnt/white-02 ntfs-3g uid=1000,gid=1000 0 0 ``` Once removing the lines above from the `/etc/fstab` file, save and exit the file by hitting the `Ctrl` + `x` key combo. You can now hit `Ctrl` + `D` to continue, or reboot: ```sh systemctl reboot ``` Once rebooted, I was able to watch the machine boot properly and launch to the TTY login screen without errors!