Re: 3.1+ kernels unbootable

From: Chris Jones
Date: Sat Apr 28 2012 - 22:23:25 EST


On Wed, 25 Apr 2012 14:44:52 +1000
NeilBrown <neilb@xxxxxxx> wrote:

>
> You have a couple of options here.
>
> One is to use git-bisect to narrow down where the breakage is. This
> means building about a dozen or a score of kernels and testing each
> one and then trying again. If you are happy building your own
> kernels and have an afternoon to spare this is probably a good idea.
> There should be plenty of instruction on the web about how to do this
> but if you cannot find any feel free to ask.
>
> The other is to try turning features off and debugging on.
> Many distros have some sort of "fail-safe" boot option which disables
> things like ACPI and known-problematic drivers... though with it
> failing so early most drives won't have even tried to run. I'd guess
> an ACPI problem, but that is largely because I know almost nothing
> about ACPI so it is easy to blame it. So try adding "acpi=off" to
> the boot args.
>
> Linux has a thing called 'early_printk' which allows messages to be
> displayed even before the normal drivers are loaded. I don't know
> much about enabling that on an x86 system (I use it a lot on ARM
> though). You need it enabled when the kernel is compiled, and you
> need a boot arg to enable it too. Maybe if you manage to enable
> that you might get some message printed.
>
> Or maybe there is some other much more useful thing you can try and
> someone else will chime in soon and tell me I don't know what I'm
> talking about and explain in detail the right way so solve this
> problem - that would be awesome.
>
> NeilBrown

I have tried all ACPI disabled options and also all safe-mode options,
among many other modes. Nothing has worked.

Now that Ubuntu 12.04 has gone gold, I might try the latest kernel in
that and see if anything has changed.

Thanks Neil.


Regards

Chris Jones
--
To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-kernel" in
the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html
Please read the FAQ at http://www.tux.org/lkml/