I have verified once again that all the devices, including the scsi adapter, are included in the kernel proper. I have set up the alphas from day one to not use modules as they are servers. The system boots fine under the 2.4.x and earlier kernels. The error message at the end of the boot process for the 2.6.x kernel is the typical "cannot find the console and try to use the init=console=ttyS0" to force the console to be.
I have double-checked and reset all the tty* and console devices as they exist under /dev/. I have also tried several variations of boot options including root=/dev/sda2, root=0x802, rootfstype=reiserfs, init=console=ttyS0, etc. All end with the same problem. Some questions that might be part of the problem: 1) Does the aboot delivered with Debian/Sarge (stable) work with the 2.6.x kernels ? The version is 0.9b-3. 2) This same version of aboot obviously supports reiserfs under 2.4.x. Is the same true for 2.6.x ? 3) Does the naming/numbering of the scsi partitions change under 2.6.x as compared to 2.4.x on the alpha ? I have three scsi drives sda, sdb, and sdc. The root filesystem is stored on sda2 using reiserfs. sda1 contains the kernel file that aboot finds to boot. The kernel files are stored on a small partition under ext2 and it finds the kernel, boots it, and further finds all the partitions on the hard drive. There is something screwy either setting up the root partition or in finding the console. From the messages to the console, it appears that the parameters passed to the kernel are being interpreted correctly. Any help appreciated. ------------------------------ James D. Freels, Ph.D. Oak Ridge National Laboratory [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://www.comsol.com/stories/hfir/ -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]