On 29/03/13 10:38, Gordon Messmer wrote: > On 03/29/2013 01:23 AM, Joakim Ziegler wrote: >> Immediately after getting dropped to rdshell, I looked around in /dev, >> which brought me a few surprises... >> /dev/mapper contains only "control", that is, "vg_resolve02-lv_root" is >> missing. > Did you get to look at or for /dev/vg_resolve02 as well? >> /dev/root is a symlink to /dev/dm-0 > Does /dev/dm-0 exist? > Does the system boot if you just "exit" from the rdshell? What about if > you "vgchange -a y" without changing the symlink? I checked this a bit more thoroughly. The status is as follows: When I boot up and get dropped to rdshell, neither /dev/root nor /dev/vg_resolve02, nor /dev/dm-0 exist. Just exiting at this point drops me back into rdshell. Waiting a few minutes makes no difference. Doing lvm vgscan finds the volume group, but creates no device nodes. Just exiting at this point drops me back into rdshell as well. When I do lvm vgchange -ay, /dev/dm-0 is created, /dev/root is created as a symlink to it, as well as /dev/vg_resolve02/ with lv_root inside it, and /dev/mapper/vg_resolve02-lv_root. I don't need to change the symlink or do anything else, if I exit after doing lvm vgchange -ay, everything is ok. >> That means /dev/root already is correct, so the only thing I'm actually >> changing to make the system boot is to scan for volume groups and >> activate them. >> >> The big question then becomes: Why do I have to do this manually? How do >> I make Dracut (I assume this is Dracut's job) make this automatically? > > udev should be doing this. And... I was just looking at this again, > because the last time I came up with nothing useful. Look at > /usr/share/dracut/modules.d/90lvm/64-lvm.rules. If I'm reading this > correctly, udev will look for dm-0 in /sys and will not run lvm_scan if > it's found. I wonder if it's possible that the /sys nodes are getting > set up, but device-mapper isn't setting up the nodes in /dev? It turns out I was wrong about dm-0 already existing, it's created on vgchange -ay. I'm looking at the file you mention, but I'm afraid I don't know LVM well enough to make that much sense of it. From what I can tell, it calls lvm_scan for each device, and there's an lvm_scan.sh in there that looks like it should be doing lvchange -ay, but if dm-0 doesn't already exist, I don't think this will do anything, am I wrong? > I'm really at a loss... it seems like a much simpler explanation is > simply that the devices take so long to detect that init gives up. When > you run vgchange, they've had the time they need. That idea is > inconsistent with the fact that your dmesg output shows what I assume is > the correct devices and partition tables. > You could try adding "rdinitdebug rdudevdebug" to your kernel command > line, but you're going to see a LOT of output, and it's only really > going to be meaningful if you've read the /init script that Dracut > creates, and understand more or less what it's doing, particularly in > the "main_loop" section. I can try this, but it might be a bit beyond my area of expertise, I'm afraid. If I were to just try a brute force approach, what RPM packages should I reinstall/update to get all this stuff reinstalled as it was the first time I installed the system? -- Joakim Ziegler - Supervisor de postproducción - Terminal joakim@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx - 044 55 2971 8514 - 5264 0864 _______________________________________________ CentOS mailing list CentOS@xxxxxxxxxx http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos