-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hash: RIPEMD160 I think I am in much better shape now. I managed to upgrade all kernel packages and speakup but had to modify my grub.cfg so all boots now with latest packages. What I have been using is kernel parameters to give me the 128x160 console but then my system stopped booting with the latest kernel upgrade. I will paste in my grub.cfg entries below so you can see what I had to comment out. Basically i stopped the insmod of the vbe module and removed the vga parms in the kernel entry. * Loading of modules #insmod vbe # Timeout for menu set timeout=15 # Set default boot entry as Entry 0 set default=0 # (0) Arch Linux menuentry "Arch Linux" { set root=(hd1,1) #linux /boot/vmlinuz26 root=/dev/sdb1 ro video=vesafb:mode=1024x768-32 vga=790 linux /boot/vmlinuz26 root=/dev/sdb1 ro initrd /boot/kernel26.img } You can see, I just commented out the entries that gave me the nice screen but at least I can boot now. Any ideas? Did something change with the 2.6.32 kernel in the VESA frame buffer department? On Thu, Dec 31, 2009 at 06:32:57PM +0100, Heiko Baums wrote: > Am Thu, 31 Dec 2009 15:49:51 +0100 > schrieb Heiko Baums <lists@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>: > > > Forgot to say that the kernel panic happened with > > kernel26-fallback.img, too. And the fallback image hasn't > > autodetection. > > > > I'm currently downgrading to [core] each package one by one and see if > > and when the kernel panic reappears. > > > > Another possibility is that something was broken before, wrong file > > permission of a file, a file was overwritten or whatever which hadn't > > had an impact before and that this was fixed by reinstalling/updating > > the appropriate package. Probably just reinstalling the appropriate > > package from [core], whatever package it was, would have helped, too. > > I don't know what was going on here but now I downgraded my system to > [core] again each package one by one and the system booted every time > without a kernel panic. There was likely something broken but I can't > imagine what, maybe some file permissions have been change or some > files have been changed or deleted by whatever and these files were > overwritten by the reinstalling/updating. Probably a reinstall of the > involved package from [core] had been sufficient. > > Greetings, > Heiko -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: GnuPG v1.4.10 (GNU/Linux) iEYEAREDAAYFAks+xQMACgkQWSjv55S0LfHahACgl1lQ84dWisIKC6vK2utI8DLB JrsAniODlmxdGzTwxEfwPqHM6l02fP+j =hc87 -----END PGP SIGNATURE-----