Joe Conway writes:

On 06/16/2010 05:39 PM, Sam Varshavchik wrote:
2) Using kexec-tools to set up a recovery kernel. Adding the crashkernel
parameter to your kernel boot prompt, reserving 128MB of your RAM for a
recovery kernel and a small boot image. When your running kernel
crashes, the recovery kernel, installed by kexec-tools, is going to
generate a kernel dump, which can then be grokked by crash to generate a
dump.

In either case, you have a fair bit of RTFMing to do.

And then after wasting all the time, you'll discover that you're not
getting a useful crash in the first place.

Hmmm, you paint a rosy picture ;-)

It's definitely:

1) A learning curve

2) Doable.

But if I do nothing, my choices are:
1) hope to get lucky on some future kernel update

There is precedent for that. Circa Fedora 9, or so, there were something like three or four kernel updates in a row before the kernel managed to boot succesfully on one of my machine.


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