New Air won't boot after failed Migration

New MacBook Air arrived this afternoon.
First thing I did was run Software Update to apply the lates OS patches.
Second thing I did was run Migration Assistant to transfer data from a Time Machine backup on an external USB disk. The old computer was small. Backup is only about 25GB. It is from a MacBook running Snow Leopard.
After about half an hour of running, Migration Assistant reached the "less than a minute remaining" stage and hung there for more than an hour. Finally I quit it. My computer then became unresponsive. I had to hold down the power key and restart.
Computer won't restart. Bong is heard, Apple appears, spinner appears, no progress after that. Unplugged the external disk, rebooted, same thing.
I rebooted to the recovery partition and ran Disk Utility, did the integrity check and the permission repair on the main volume, no improvement.
Finally I gave up and started the Reinstall Lion option. I'd read about this, figured it was something I might need someday, never imagined I'd be running it within hours of getting the computer. Display says I have 5 hours and 45 minutes to wait.
What went wrong here? What should I do when it is done reinstalling? I'd like to have my old stuff back, but I don't want to kill my computer again.
Frank

For what it's worth, booting stops at the "Waiting for DSMOS" step.

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    Having realized I had borked my system, I removed the /var line from fstab and restored /var from the tar file I made earlier. Again I did this from a live cd. Rebooted into my arch system, and again similar issues, namely that after fsck and messages informing a few services had started, the screen keeps blinking.
    The live cd I used for reorganizing my partitions was elementary OS freya. They have GParted in there. I also have an arch install iso lying aroung from May 2013. If necessary, I can download the latest version. I am currently typing from a Windows installation I dual boot from.
    I don't know how to extract any boot logs as I am locked out of the system. Here is my fstab in any case:
    # Filesystem information
    # /dev/sda5 LABEL=fs_root
    UUID=b9d739cf-fd8c-46dd-a919-bd827dc47c66 / ext4 rw,noatime,data=ordered 0 1
    # /dev/sda9 LABEL=fs_var
    UUID=ec0f7a49-dccd-43ab-8651-9aa3fdb41cc7 /var ext4 rw,noatime,data=ordered 0 2
    # /dev/sda2 LABEL=fs_boot
    UUID=0e8ab31a-3bda-4b85-a901-a36f21b1583d /boot ext2 rw,noatime 0 2
    # /dev/sda6 LABEL=fs_home
    UUID=d9e63c47-274e-447f-ad01-0d97afe0fd34 /home ext4 rw,noatime,data=ordered 0 2
    # /dev/sda7 LABEL=fs_swap
    UUID=7301227c-e9f3-41b8-9d0f-4cf3c159491c none swap defaults 0 0
    # /dev/sda3 LABEL=fs_win
    UUID=12B639D1B639B5D7 /fs_win ntfs uid=1000,gid=1000,dmask=027,fmask=137,showexec,nofail,noauto,x-systemd.automount 0 0
    # /dev/sda3 LABEL=fs_share
    UUID=D272269772268079 /fs_share ntfs uid=1000,gid=1000,dmask=027,fmask=137,showexec,noauto,nofail,x-systemd.automount 0 0
    I would greatly appreciate any help.
    Last edited by richcocoa (2015-05-03 18:04:44)

    Have you moved everything from /var to /new_var (i named it for learning purpose)? You shoud copy content from /var but not on the fly but booting from arch iso cd, and than you shoud mount your / into arch-chroot environement, mount all of your mount points and than copy content from default /var to new /var. The copying should be done with this
    cp -rax
    and you can add -v switch to verbose output. I have my own /var moved the same way.
    The simples way is:
    -boot the arch iso cd
    -mount all of your mount point (i created here in this step /new_var to move /var to a new place, and this /new_var i put in /etc/fstab as /var later)
    -copy /var to /new_var with -rax or -vrax (recursive, archive, this filesystem or verbose, recursive, archive, this filesystem switches)
    -umount all of it
    -reboot.
    Last edited by firekage (2015-05-02 07:49:20)

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