On Feb 3, 2012, at 5:02 PM, wwp <subscript@xxxxxxx> wrote: > Hello Ross, > > > On Fri, 3 Feb 2012 16:01:53 -0500 Ross Walker <rswwalker@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > >> On Feb 3, 2012, at 1:34 PM, wwp <subscript@xxxxxxx> wrote: >> >>> Hello Jerry, >>> >>> >>> On Fri, 03 Feb 2012 12:24:14 -0500 Jerry Geis <geisj@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: >>> >>>> I am trying to install 6.2 on a machine. >>>> I am using PXE as I have done so a number of times. >>>> >>>> My hard disk is being detected as sdb and not sda. >>>> My kickstart config is wanting it at sda. >>>> >>>> There are no other disks in the unit. It has and SD slot and an esata >>>> although BIOS does not appear to have a disable for either of those devices. >>>> >>>> Is there anyway to "force" the disk to sda ? >>>> or find out what its detecting at sda and disable that from the PXE boot >>>> line? >>>> >>>> Doing " dmesg | grep sda" does say SCSI removable disk. >>>> >>>> So how can I tell linux to NOT include that when installing? >>> >>> I noticed that behaviour with my CentOS6 (installed and kept up-to-date >>> using yum). This happened since kernel kernel-2.6.32-220.el6.x86_64 and >>> furthers updates. Was working as expected (my laptop's hdd mounted as >>> sda) with previous kernels, up to kernel-2.6.32-131.21.1.el6.x86_64. >>> >>> I wonder if that behaviour, and the *change* of behaviour is an issue >>> that should be reported, and how to handle it on installed systems! >>> For now, I'm either booting w/ no USB disk plugged, or booting >>> a 2.6.32-131 kernel. >> >> You can try disabling USB disk support in the bios. > > Right, but I can't make such settings permanent, as I need to boot from > a USB disk from time to time, thus, entering BIOS and changing settings > costs more than unplugging stuff :-). > > An aspect of the problem w/ that behaviour change introduced w/ recent > kernel updates, is that some mount mapping tables (fstab for instance) > are broken if they rely on mount order (sda, hda, etc.) instead of > device ID or label. I remember faintly there was abway to specify module order in C5 modprobe and regenerate the initrd to make it persistent, but I don't think C6 uses modprobe. Maybe there is an initrd option under /etc/sysconfig. Once that's done you can re-enable USB disk support in the BIOS. -Ross _______________________________________________ CentOS mailing list CentOS@xxxxxxxxxx http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos