Briefly describe your issue below:
During boot the first thing i can see is
[FAILED] Failed to start apparmor
See systemctl status Apparmor.service for details
What version of Parrot are you running? (include version, edition, and architecture)
Parrot 4.18 Securit edition 64 bits What method did you use to install Parrot? (Debian Standard / Debian GTK / parrot-experimental) Debian standard
Configured to multiboot with other systems? (yes / no)
Yes, Windows 10 If there are any similar issues or solutions, link to them below:
If there are any error messages or relevant logs, post them below:
$ systemctl status apparmor-service
apparmor.service - Load AppArmor profiles
Loaded: loaded (/lib/systemd/system/apparmor.service; enabled; vendor preset: enabled)
Active: failed (Result: exit-code) since Sun 2018-11-04 12:53:24 CET; 1min 22s ago
Docs: man:apparmor(7) https://gitlab.com/apparmor/apparmor/wikis/home/
Process: 387 ExecStart=/etc/init.d/apparmor start (code=exited, status=123)
Main PID: 387 (code=exited, status=123)
You are using an outdated version that has had many changes and improvements missing that have been made between 4.18 and the current 4.3 version that was released recently, try using 4.3 and see if that fixes your problems.
If you are reinstalling correctly and truly ‘clean’ there is no way that would persist accross the systems even if they share a hardwrive they do not occuppy at the same time and the drive has been reformatted between as well. If its a version issue/bug then if it is triggered by any update or removal that is called when the default system boots the first time then it will occur again, you may be able to narrow it down with a few reinstalls paying close attention to events and configuration changes but it could also be a very long task given the variables.
Actually I found by myself that it was a problem of bad partitions. I had two Linux systems, and I did two swap-partitions (yeah i’m dumb), then I deleted one of swaps, which actually was binded to ParrotOS.
So I did blkid, found my swap partition’s UUID, and edited /etc/fstab file with info about swap.