> Get a copy of the kernel that Centos uses and rebuild that
> with the
> Centos configuration.
>
> Alternatively, copy the Centos kernel to your LFS
> system. You'll also
> need to copy the entire /lib/modules/<kernel-version>
> tree.
>
> -- Bruce
What I did was get a copy of the CentOS config file, moved it over to the LFS
system and then rebuilt the kernel. I thought I had tried that before, but
didn't remember the result, other than the fact it wouldn't boot.
What happens is I get:
VFS: Cannot open root device "sda1" on unknown - block (0.)
Please append a correct "root=" boot option, here are the available options:
and then it panics.
Now I don't know much about building kernels, so I followed the directions in
the book, didn't vary at all. One thing I will point out is the CentOS system
uses initrd. I don't know where that is defined, maybe that the reason for the
panic.
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