Mikkel L. Ellertson wrote:
Philip Prindeville wrote:
I recently decided that my build server was running too slow (disk
bound) and went out and bought a 3ware 9650SE controller and disks.
Got the array configured as a single RAID 5 logical unit (yes, I know,
RAID 5 has slow writes...) and ran fdisk on the unit to create partitions.
I formatted the partitions...
I mounted each of the partitions and did the following:
# cd /old-fs-mnt-point
# find . -depth -mount -print0 | cpio --null -pdv /new-fs-mnt-point
then I ran:
# mkswap ...
# hal-device | less
to get the UUID's. I edited the new /boot/grub/grub.conf and /etc/fstab
and rebooted. Oops. Didn't quite work. Needed to change the BIOS
drive assignment order so that the array was now /dev/sda.
Rebooted.
You also have to tell Grub about the BIOS drive changes. Grub use
the BIOS to access the drives. The first stage is dumb, and only
know the physical location of stage 1.5, and if you change the BIOS
ordering, it looks on the wrong drive.
System hung: forgot to install the boot blocks.
Hmmm... Tried to run "install-grub /dev/sda" from the Live CD, but that
didn't work. Something about not being able to figure out the BIOS
drive number... don't understand why that's relevant, but that's a
different story...
Grub uses the BIOS to access the hard drive. So you need to know the
BIOS number of the drive as Grub will see it. This may not be the
same numbering as when you boot from a CD/DVD.
So I reran the installer, using a small partition that I had left for
whatever... and it wrote the boot blocks and MBR.
Editted /boot/grub/grub.conf to change back the default to what I
wanted... and rebooted.
Now the system hangs at:
Red Hat nash version 6.0.52 starting
Unable to access resume device (/dev/sda3)
mount: error mounting /dev/root on /sysroot as ext3: No such file or
directory
setuproot: moving /dev failed: No such file or directory
setuproot: error mounting /proc: No such file or directory
setuproot: error mounting /sys: No such file or directory
Mount failed for selinuxfs: on /selinux: No such file or directory
switchroot: mount failed: No such file or directory
This is FC9 (updated) x86_64 on a Phenom/NVidia MB.
What have I forgotten?
You need to rebuild the initrd.
Moving filesystems used to be a lot easier (these are plain ol' ext3
filesystems... I'm not using LVM)... and I thought the whole UUID
support was to simplify moving drives around, etc.
Doesn't seem to be the case. (Ah, for the days when just about
everything that caused a booting system to hang was pretty much
self-evident and transparent...)
There's a certain amount of tweaking I've done of the configuration, the
rpm's I've installed, accounts created, kernel variables that I tune...
it's kind of painful to have to do a reinstall from scratch.
Also, I wanted to peek inside the initrd.*.img files and see if there
was anything in there choking up... but I couldn't figure out how to
mount them as loopback filesystems.
Any revelation of these mysteries appreciated.
-Philip
One problem with changing the root file system to a drive on a
different controller is that the driver may not be in the initrd, so
the kernel can not access the drive. This is inherent with building
a kernel with all the driver controllers as modules. But with all
the different controllers, the only other way to handle it would be
to have a much larger kernel with lots of unneeded drivers build in,
or have a initrd with all the drivers. Both would wast a lot of memory.
One other thing you are going to run into if you use SELinux is the
the new drive is going to have the wrong contexts. You are going to
have to relabel the files.
Mikkel
And as I found out late last night (too bad you hadn't yet written
this!), you are exactly right on both counts.
I needed to rerun mkinitrd:
mkinitrd --with=3w-9xxx --with=shpchp --with=libata --with=ahci
/boot/initrd-`uname -r`.img `uname -r`
then I unpacked the .img file:
mkdir /tmp/xx
cd $!
gunzip -c /boot/initrd-`uname -r`.img | cpio -idv
and edited the "init" file. Turning off "setquiet" helped a lot (if
"init" understood command-line args, passing in -v -- or something
similar -- would have been really handy here). Verified the "mkrootdev"
and "resume" lines...
I'm a little disappointed that "init" can't just grab the "root="
argument from the command line.
Embedding the actual device name in the "resume": not sure why this
happens and why we can't just use UUID. The man page for "nash" doesn't
mention "resume" as a built-in, and the .img doesn't contain sbin/resume
or bin/resume ... Odd.
So, the bottom line is that I was bitten in the butt by not rerunning
"mkinitrd" with the drivers that I would need to have to reboot on the
3ware controller.
Plus, as you also astutely point out, I needed to do:
touch /.autorelabel
before rebooting.
It would be great to have a tool (or even a How-To) to make sure a
transition easier... but as you point out, you don't always know what
the drive assignments are going to be until after the fact (which is a
good argument for having a FreeDOS partition... too bad FreeDOS can't
boot from USB or understand USB drives).
-Philip
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