F5F Stay Refreshed Software Operating Systems PopOS failed to start and switched to a safe operating state.

PopOS failed to start and switched to a safe operating state.

PopOS failed to start and switched to a safe operating state.

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ADIR_4444
Senior Member
417
05-22-2022, 09:35 AM
#1
I began using the system and opened Steam when the Gnome interface froze; the mouse responded but other functions failed. After a few minutes, the drive activity indicator faded and I performed a hard reboot. When I accessed the Systemd boot menu, a gray flash appeared from the login screen before it crashed. Switching between the current and old kernels via the boot menu didn’t help. I haven’t tried the recovery partition yet, but I can access Windows, which suggests hardware issues aren’t the cause. After some research, I found a guide on Ubuntu forums about emergency mode and file system errors. On booting into the recovery partition, I see sda as an NTFS-formatted drive that appears to mount automatically. There’s another partition labeled sdb, where PopOS is installed, but I’m unsure how to resolve the “Partition 1 does not start on physical sector boundary” warning. If anyone has insights or solutions, it would be greatly appreciated. Should refreshing the OS from the recovery partition resolve this problem?
A
ADIR_4444
05-22-2022, 09:35 AM #1

I began using the system and opened Steam when the Gnome interface froze; the mouse responded but other functions failed. After a few minutes, the drive activity indicator faded and I performed a hard reboot. When I accessed the Systemd boot menu, a gray flash appeared from the login screen before it crashed. Switching between the current and old kernels via the boot menu didn’t help. I haven’t tried the recovery partition yet, but I can access Windows, which suggests hardware issues aren’t the cause. After some research, I found a guide on Ubuntu forums about emergency mode and file system errors. On booting into the recovery partition, I see sda as an NTFS-formatted drive that appears to mount automatically. There’s another partition labeled sdb, where PopOS is installed, but I’m unsure how to resolve the “Partition 1 does not start on physical sector boundary” warning. If anyone has insights or solutions, it would be greatly appreciated. Should refreshing the OS from the recovery partition resolve this problem?

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RainbowFish5
Member
122
05-22-2022, 09:35 AM
#2
The device is under a year old, but there might be options to restore it and retrieve your information.
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RainbowFish5
05-22-2022, 09:35 AM #2

The device is under a year old, but there might be options to restore it and retrieve your information.

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ariel_8888
Member
214
05-22-2022, 09:35 AM
#3
You're still unsure about a hardware issue despite being able to access the recovery partition and noting the drive's age. Thank you for reaching out.
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ariel_8888
05-22-2022, 09:35 AM #3

You're still unsure about a hardware issue despite being able to access the recovery partition and noting the drive's age. Thank you for reaching out.

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C_dawg1234
Junior Member
19
05-22-2022, 09:35 AM
#4
About six months ago, my 1.5-year-old laptop running Ubuntu (dual-booted with Windows) faced a similar issue. The machine froze while compiling, putting it under full CPU strain, which initially made me think of overheating. After a hard restart, it entered emergency mode. Windows functioned normally, and accessing the broken partition via a live USB worked without major problems (though I’m not sure about missing files in /usr). The first step was backing up /home, which succeeded later. System logs revealed that even though the CPU was at 100%, Ubuntu started a background firmware update through its updater. Recent entries noted firmware updates, including one for my SSD, which was running benchmarks to determine optimal settings post-update (like testing RAID profiles and performance metrics). I couldn’t verify it, but a bug in the update process might have triggered the whole problem. I skipped troubleshooting, just reformatted the Ubuntu partition, reinstalled everything, and restored /home. It operated smoothly for two months before switching to Arch Linux. In your situation, a faulty SSD is a possibility, but other software glitches could also be responsible without causing lasting hardware damage.
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C_dawg1234
05-22-2022, 09:35 AM #4

About six months ago, my 1.5-year-old laptop running Ubuntu (dual-booted with Windows) faced a similar issue. The machine froze while compiling, putting it under full CPU strain, which initially made me think of overheating. After a hard restart, it entered emergency mode. Windows functioned normally, and accessing the broken partition via a live USB worked without major problems (though I’m not sure about missing files in /usr). The first step was backing up /home, which succeeded later. System logs revealed that even though the CPU was at 100%, Ubuntu started a background firmware update through its updater. Recent entries noted firmware updates, including one for my SSD, which was running benchmarks to determine optimal settings post-update (like testing RAID profiles and performance metrics). I couldn’t verify it, but a bug in the update process might have triggered the whole problem. I skipped troubleshooting, just reformatted the Ubuntu partition, reinstalled everything, and restored /home. It operated smoothly for two months before switching to Arch Linux. In your situation, a faulty SSD is a possibility, but other software glitches could also be responsible without causing lasting hardware damage.

C
81
05-22-2022, 09:35 AM
#5
That's frustrating. As a fresh Linux user, I'm wondering if I should pull config files from /var or /etc instead of /home before trying to restore the system from the recovery partition. Also, with all my Flatpaks installed, do I need those specific files?
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catarinabernas
05-22-2022, 09:35 AM #5

That's frustrating. As a fresh Linux user, I'm wondering if I should pull config files from /var or /etc instead of /home before trying to restore the system from the recovery partition. Also, with all my Flatpaks installed, do I need those specific files?