On 4/19/05, Jim Cornette <fc-cornette@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > Slava Bizyayev wrote: > > On Tue, 2005-04-19 at 06:11, Jim Cornette wrote: > > > >>Yuandan Zhang wrote: > >> > >>>Michael Hennebry wrote: > >>> > >>> > >>>>On 16 Apr 2005, Slava Bizyayev wrote: > >>>> > >>>> > >>>>>I use kernel-2.6.10-1.770_FC3 on my HP OmniBook XE2 pretty happily. > >>>>>After updating kernel to kernel-2.6.11-1.14_FC3 I experience a strange > >>>>>behavior -- in the end of the boot (instead of X-login screen) machine > >>>>>freezes, and I cannot even get the terminal access with ctrl-alt-F1. Has > >>>>>someone experienced something similar? What's the work around? > >>>>> > >>> > >>>Hi, I got exactly the same problem. I upgaded kernel from > >>>kernel-2.6.10-1.770_FC3 on my HP nx5000 to kernel-2.6.11-1.14_FC3, Boot > >>>freezed. I troed to boot to the old kernel kernel-2.6.10-1.770_FC3, it > >>>froze too. > >>> > >> > >>If the kernel-2.6.10-1.770_FC3 used to work and then stopped working > >>after upgrading to the kernel-2.6.11-1.14_FC3 version, using the > >>original kernel might not be of much help. There is probably a problem > >>related to something else that you installed along with the kernel > >>update that is causing you problems. > >> > > > > > > In my case kernel-2.6.10-1.770_FC3 is running just fine when I'm quick > > enough to switch on boot... > > > > Any other ideas? > > > > Thanks, > > Slava > > > > > > What you want to do is to comment out the hidemenu portion,change your > timeout to a higher number, say 5 seconds. You also might want to change > the default kernel to pointing at the later versioned kernel. The number > sequence for booting starts at zero and each entry in line goes up to > number one and so forth. I posted my config for reference. Note > hidenmenu is commented out with a # sign. I only have one kernel, so I > am set as default=0. If there was an entry below this boot entry, I > would change default=1 for the second entry and so forth. > > I guess you can uninstall the defunct kernel w/ the below as root and > not mess with the grub.conf file, if it is no good for your computer. > rpm -e kernel-2.6.11-1.14_FC3 > should wipe out this kernel version and leave you with the working > kernel-2.6.10-1.770_FC3 and you can file a bug report regarding the new > kernel not booting for your computer. The developers can guide you to > useful information that they can track down the file with. > > Good luck, > > Jim > > Example: only to show default, timeout and hiddenmenu options. > cat /etc/grub.conf > # grub.conf generated by anaconda > # > # Note that you do not have to rerun grub after making changes to this file > # NOTICE: You have a /boot partition. This means that > # all kernel and initrd paths are relative to /boot/, eg. > # root (hd0,0) > # kernel /vmlinuz-version ro root=/dev/hda3 > # initrd /initrd-version.img > #boot=/dev/hda > default=0 > timeout=5 > splashimage=(hd0,0)/grub/splash.xpm.gz > # hiddenmenu > title Fedora Core (2.6.11-1.1240_FC4) > root (hd0,0) > kernel /vmlinuz-2.6.11-1.1240_FC4 ro root=LABEL=/ acpi=on 3 > initrd /initrd-2.6.11-1.1240_FC4.img > Here is another file that you should review: $ cat /etc/sysconfig/kernel # UPDATEDEFAULT specifies if new-kernel-pkg should make # new kernels the default UPDATEDEFAULT=yes # DEFAULTKERNEL specifies the default kernel package type DEFAULTKERNEL=kernel Edit /etc/sysconfig/kernel and change UPDATEDEFAULT from "yes" to "no" if you do not want "default" in grub.conf to be modified. You should do this if you multi-boot and you want another OS or kernel to be the default boot selection.