I was most def root. /home isn't mounted as a separate filesystem. It's not even tmpfs or btrfs. I was able to boot into single user mode to remove it, but this isn't possible in an automated fashion. I may just have to start building my own images.
Still curious to know why I can't rename or move it. Anyone else try this on a stock 7.3 build?
On Thu, Dec 15, 2016 at 8:42 AM, m.roth@5-cent.us wrote:
Jon LaBadie wrote:
On Thu, Dec 15, 2016 at 04:10:07AM -0600, geo.inbox.ignored wrote:
On 12/15/2016 01:47 AM, Gianluca Cecchi wrote:
On Thu, Dec 15, 2016 at 2:49 AM, Glenn E. Bailey III < replicant@dallaslamers.org> wrote:
Tried this in both AWS and GCE as I though it may be a specific cloud vendor issue. SELinux is disabled, lsof | grep home shows nothing, lsattr /home shows nothing. Simply get "Device or resource busy."
Works just find on 7.2 so I'm kinda at a loss. Scanned over the RHEL release notes and didn't see anything. Anyone else have this issue?
We
move our /home to another mount point and symlink /home to it ..
Do you have access to the console, so that you can try to do the move
while
in single user mode?
}}
that is one possibility.
even greater is op is a 'user', not 'root'.
<snip>
Here's a question to OP: how did you log into the system? If as *user*, rather than as root, the filesystem is busy because you're logged on, and in it.
Missed some of the posts overnight - has anyone asked for the o/p of df -h?
mark
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