This is happening on anything other than plain vanilla Dell servers. One R730, with dual Tesla cards, one R420, with a fibre card for a RAID device, it never switches root. All these systems have Xeons, not AMD CPUs. We've had this with every one of the 327 kernels. In addition, it seems to happen also with the 229.20.1; the 229.14.1 has no such problem. >From the rdsosreport: starting at line 126: /dev/disk/by-label: total 0 lrwxrwxrwx 1 root 0 10 Jan 27 19:03 SWAP -> ../../sda2 lrwxrwxrwx 1 root 0 10 Jan 27 19:03 \x2f -> ../../sda3 lrwxrwxrwx 1 root 0 10 Jan 27 19:03 \x2fboot -> ../../sda1 Then, starting at line 1283: [ 3.317027] <servername> systemd[1]: Found device ST500NM0003-9ZM172 /. [ 3.317974] <servername> systemd[1]: Starting File System Check on /dev/disk/by-label/\x2f... [ 3.320089] <servername> systemd-fsck[590]: Failed to detect device /dev/disk/by-label// [ 3.320567] <servername> systemd[1]: systemd-fsck-root.service: main process exited, code=exited, status=1/FAILURE [ 3.320972] <servername> systemd[1]: Failed to start File System Check on /dev/disk/by-label/\x2f. Does *ANYONE* have any clues as to what's going on? Meanwhile, on a plain vanilla Dell R420, I see: ll /dev/disk/by-label/ total 0 lrwxrwxrwx. 1 root root 10 Feb 17 10:06 SWAP -> ../../sda2 lrwxrwxrwx. 1 root root 10 Feb 17 10:06 boot -> ../../sda1 lrwxrwxrwx. 1 root root 10 Feb 17 10:06 root -> ../../sda3 So, what is this by-label with the x2f, and why can't it find the drives? Or do I have to file a bug report? This is a true show-stopper. mark _______________________________________________ CentOS mailing list CentOS@xxxxxxxxxx https://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos