Neil Horman <nhorman@xxxxxxxxxx> writes:
You could of
course boot the installer kernel with a crashkernel line pre-selected suppose,
but then you have to go to the trouble of figuring that allocation size out each
time. This gives you a nice convienent way to get a reasonable block of memory
without the need to do all that extra work.
My big concern is that you are moving policy into the kernel, when it isn't at
all clear that policy is the right thing to do, and the existing mechanisms give
you enough rope to do this all in userspace.
You also have to build (or at least load) the whole kdump image after
the system boots, and configure someplace for this to be saved.
What class of problems do you expect to catch with this?
What has me puzzled is that the mkdumprd that ships with fedora isn't
usable without patching, and it seems to be steadily getting worse.