Il giorno mer, 24/01/2007 alle 19.19 +0100, Sander Hoentjen ha scritto: > Thank you very much for taking the time to answer! > The machine is remote so I cannot see it when booting. Is there any way > to see the errors after startup? You can check with the dmesg command or reading the log. First /var/log/messages... and after some other log, but it depends. Normally the messages is enough > > # ls /etc/rc.d/rc3.d/ > K02avahi-dnsconfd K69rpcsvcgssd K89netplugd S05kudzu S13iscsi S25bluetooth S55cups S95anacron > K02dhcdbd K73ypbind K89pand S06cpuspeed S13mcstrans S25netfs S55sshd S95atd > K02NetworkManager K74nscd K89rdisc S08ip6tables S13portmap S25pcscd S58ntpd S97yum-updatesd > K02NetworkManagerDispatcher K80kdump K91capi S09isdn S14nfslock S26apmd S60vsftpd S98avahi-daemon > K05saslauthd K85mdmpd K92iptables S10network S15mdmonitor S26hidd S80sendmail S98haldaemon > K10psacct K87multipathd K99microcode_ctl S10restorecond S18rpcidmapd S28autofs S85gpm S99firstboot > K20nfs K88wpa_supplicant K99readahead_later S12syslog S19rpcgssd S44acpid S85httpd S99local > K24irda K89dund S04readahead_early S13irqbalance S22messagebus S55apf S90crond S99smartd > > So If I understand correctly network goes up, then iscsi and then netfs.. That should be the right order I think. I hope you have some more suggestions. This should be the right sequence. I don't understand what appens. Maybe something need a modules that can't be loaded at boot time, because you need to recreate the init ram disk (initrd). This can explain why you can use it after boot. What kind of partition are /boot and /? If you read the messages log and you see something strange, post it Bye Ambrogio