It looks to me like the PINN upgrade failed. But don't worry, it should be recoverable.
(If any data is critical, please backup your drive first in case something bad happens or you make a mistake).
The latest versions of PINN have additional kernels for the Pi5, so they require a larger recovery partition as it only just fits in 64MB. Maybe your drive just doesn't quite have enough space on it, although PINN tries to test whether this is the case.
I suggest a manual upgrade to 3.8.8, which is the last version before space became critical.
Please download https://sourceforge.net/projects/pinn/files/archive/pinn-388.zip/download.
Delete all the PINN files and folders in PINN's recovery partition ( on /dev/sdc1 from your previous post).
Unzip pinn-388.zip to this recovery partition.
Edit recovery.cmdline and delete the `runinstaller` option.
Finally, boot PINN and it should now be ok.
If that still fails, repeat using https://sourceforge.net/projects/pinn/files/archive/pinn-387f.zip/download.
Since these are not the latest versions, you will still be asked if you want to upgrade again, but I suggest you click ignore to avoid hitting the same problem again.
If you want to upgrade PINN in the future, I suggest you use a larger recovery partition.
By using the `runinstaller` option it will expand the recovery partition, but at the expense of wiping out all your installed OSes, so make sure you have backed them up first so you can reinstall them.
A safer way would be to install the latest PINN to a new drive and then reinstall your OSes from a backup.
(If you clicked ignore to the upgrade, you would have to check for a manual update - see https://github.com/procount/pinn/blob/m ... idual-oses)
(If any data is critical, please backup your drive first in case something bad happens or you make a mistake).
The latest versions of PINN have additional kernels for the Pi5, so they require a larger recovery partition as it only just fits in 64MB. Maybe your drive just doesn't quite have enough space on it, although PINN tries to test whether this is the case.
I suggest a manual upgrade to 3.8.8, which is the last version before space became critical.
Please download https://sourceforge.net/projects/pinn/files/archive/pinn-388.zip/download.
Delete all the PINN files and folders in PINN's recovery partition ( on /dev/sdc1 from your previous post).
Unzip pinn-388.zip to this recovery partition.
Edit recovery.cmdline and delete the `runinstaller` option.
Finally, boot PINN and it should now be ok.
If that still fails, repeat using https://sourceforge.net/projects/pinn/files/archive/pinn-387f.zip/download.
Since these are not the latest versions, you will still be asked if you want to upgrade again, but I suggest you click ignore to avoid hitting the same problem again.
If you want to upgrade PINN in the future, I suggest you use a larger recovery partition.
By using the `runinstaller` option it will expand the recovery partition, but at the expense of wiping out all your installed OSes, so make sure you have backed them up first so you can reinstall them.
A safer way would be to install the latest PINN to a new drive and then reinstall your OSes from a backup.
(If you clicked ignore to the upgrade, you would have to check for a manual update - see https://github.com/procount/pinn/blob/m ... idual-oses)
Statistics: Posted by procount — Wed Jan 22, 2025 3:11 pm