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On Fri, May 14, 2021 at 2:36 AM John Covici <cov...@ccs.covici.com> wrote:

>
> I would look in the grub.cfg and give us exactly what is in the stanza
> you are using, including where it thinks the root file system is,
> etc.  Also, see if there is any genkernel option to get some debugging
> info out of the initrd, I know using dracut you can get breakpoints
> during the process and see how its doing.


Tried dracut.  No change.

Added the kernel command line debug options (#3 in “Identifying your
problem area” in ‘man dracut’).  No change.

Feeling peevish, I made a file of random junk using dd if=/dev/random
of=initrd.img count=4096.  Then supplied that pile of junk as the initrd.
Again, no change.

Then I supplied a nonexistent file name (xxx.img) as the initrd.  This time
I got a complaint:

error: file ‘/xxx.img’ not found.

Press any key to continue...

So, it’s getting as far as wanting to read the initrd, and is smart enough
to tell whether the specified initrd actually exists on the specified boot
partition.  But it can’t actually be doing anything with the initrd, or it
would have objected to the random junk I fed it.

>From https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Initial_ramdisk#Implementation, it
appears that grub is in charge of loading both linux and the initrd into
memory, then handing execution over to linux along with a pointer to the
memory location of the initrd.

I’ve observed that that no booting output comes out of linux, nor any
complaints from linux about the nonsense contents I fed it from the random
initrd I built.  That suggests to me that grub has failed to load linux
and/or the initrd into memory, or that it's failed to hand execution
control to linux.

Next step:  learned how to run an interactive grub2 command shell. With
full debugging turned on, it looks like grub2 can load the kernel image,
and it looks like it loads the initrd as well.  At least there are no
complaints and the reported initrd size looks correct.

But when I issue the boot command, grub2 issues a handful of mallocs and
does a little token parsing, and then just stops...

So it appears that the boot problem arises right around the handoff from
grub2 to linux.  Don’t know whether grub2 or linux has failed.  I don’t
know how to get either one to tell me more.

John

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