Welcome to Linux Forums! With a comprehensive Linux Forum, information on various types of Linux software and many Linux Reviews articles, we have all the knowledge you need a click away, or accessible via our knowledgeable members.
Write an article for LinuxForums Today! Win Great Prizes!
hi,
I am trying to sort out some problems with a laptop. Version is 3.3.
I compiled the new kernel as usual, no dpkg stuff.
make menuconfig; make bzImage && make modules
&& make modules_install; make install. Now, I have it dual booting
with grub, plus the old kernel added in menu as backup. The old
kernel (2.4.22-xfs) boots normal, the new kernel hangs with or without an initrd file.
I have compiled 2.6.xx kernels several times, run lspci -v to make
sure the hardware, and the grub pointers are the same for each kernel as far as root device, filesystem are concerned. Here are the errors;
with initrd-2.6.11;
RAMDISK: cramfs filesystem found at block 0
RAMDISKl Loading 1228KiB [1 disk] into ram disk.. done.
Kernel panic - not syncing: VFS: Unable to mount root fs on unknown-block(3,2)
without initrd;
VFS: Cannot open root device "hda2"
Please append a correct "root=" boot option
Kernel panic - not syncing: VFS: Unable to mount root fs on unknown-block(3,2)
The kernel root= boot option is identical for the old kernel, it loads.
BTW, 2.6.11 hangs for about 20-30 seconds upon IRQ discovery of IDE1 (hdc).
I was going to use SimplyMepis, already have it on disc, but I solved the
problem. It had to do with the kernel being newer than the system config and packages, concerning modules. Your idea made me realize I hadn't done
a smart enough upgrade yet, so I had to recompile the kernel without ROMFS
support, which I had done (module). There are still some minor kinks, it needs the full upgrade, but it's making it to login. thanks
Open Source Security Myths Dispelled Dispel the five major myths surrounding Open Source Security and gain the tools necessary to make a truly informed decision for your IT organization subscribe
InformationWeek InformationWeek is the only newsweekly you'll need to stay on top of the latest developments in information technology. subscribe