On Fri, Aug 19, 2011 at 9:12 AM, <fra...@gmail.com> wrote: > Em 19/08/2011 07:09, Mick <michaelkintz...@gmail.com> escreveu: > > On Friday 19 Aug 2011 03:27:23 Mark Knecht wrote: > > > > On Thu, Aug 18, 2011 at 11:59 AM, fra...@gmail.com> wrote: > > > > Hi, guys > > > > > > > > It is a shame, I know, but after several years using Gentoo, it is > the > > > > first time I try to build a kernel without "genkernel". > > > > > > > > And now I can't boot to that new kernel, it does not find (and really > do > > > > not have a) /dev/sda* root partition ("real-root"); during the boot > it > > > > stops, complaining about that, gives me the option to get a shell, > from > > > > which I am able to see that there is no /dev/sda* . > > > > > > > > I have included everything SATA, so it looks like that is not a > kernel > > > > problem, but a initramfs issue, I guess. > > > > > > > > What am I missing? > > > > > > > > Thanks a lot > > > > Francisco > > > > > > > > P.S.: my boot partition is sda2, sda3 is a swap partition, and > everything > > > > else is in sda4. sda1 is not used (up to now) and this is my > grub.conf : > > > > > > > > title Gentoo Linux 2.6.39-gentoo-r3 > > > > root (hd0,1) > > > > kernel /boot/kernel-genkernel-x86_64-2.6.39-gentoo-r3 ro > root=/dev/ram0 > > > > init=/linuxrc real_root=/dev/sda4 vga=0x318 video=uvesafb:1024x768-32 > > > > nodevfs udev devfs=nomount quiet CONSOLE=/dev/tty1 > > > > initrd /boot/initramfs-genkernel-x86_64-2.6.39-gentoo-r3 > > > > > > Maybe I'm missing the obvious here but have you taken a copy of > > > whatever config file was used/generated by genkernel and used that as > > > a jumping off point for building your own kernel. kernel's a kernel's > > > a kernel. What it is capable of doing is in the .config file. If > > > genkernel doesn't give you a .config file - I've never used genkernel > > > so I don't know what it does - then assuming you have the feature > > > turned on you can get the running config using zcat /proc/config.gz. > > > Save that to a new .config file, put it in the kernel source directory > > > and you should be good to go. > > > > > > You can also use zcat /proc/config.gz on the install CD kernel if yuo > > > boot from that. Save it to a disk and use it as the basis for creating > > > your own config. > > > > If you no longer use genkernel it is likely that you do not need an > initram. > > Build chipset and fs modules into the kernel. Other drivers you can > choose if > > you want to build as modules. > > I the case I don't need a initram, I guess that the grub line for parameter > passing to the kernel would be empty. Am I wrong? > > I was just looking on how to build my own initram. What is it supposed to > do anyway? >
The initramfs is a container for modules and stuff need to bring up the system before the mounts of / and /boot. If all the drivers are built-in to the kernel (or at least the minimum required drivers are built-in) then the initramfs isn't necessary. Passing parameters to the kernel is a different issue entirely. My grub.conf line is: kernel /vmlinuz-3.0.3-gentoo root=/dev/sda2 pata_it821x.noraid=1 with the pata_it821x driver built-in for the kenel to find a set of older IDE drives on the IT8212 card I have installed. IIRC the initramfs is built with the mkinitrd command. I haven't had to use it so I could be wrong.