Good day, I'm currently experimenting with the use of kexec() to change the currently-running kernel on my test machine (Intel PC). So far, so good: I'm able to change the currently-running kernel and initrd image via kexec, and am now attempting to live-boot an ISO image (i.e. Ubuntu 18.04 Server amd64 image), via the following snippet (not yet working): mount -o loop -t iso9660 /public/ubuntu.iso /boot ISO_FILE="/public/ubuntu.iso" DEVICE="/dev/sda3" UUID=$(blkid ${DEVICE} | tail -1 | tr " " "\n" | grep UUID | cut -d\" -f2) APPEND="toram fromiso=/dev/disk/by-uuid/${UUID}/${ISO_FILE} iso-scan/filename=/${ISO_PATH}" kexec -l /boot/casper/vmlinuz --initrd=/boot/casper/initrd --append="${APPEND}" Question: is it possible to kexec() into an ISO that's stored on my sole (LUKS encrypted) OS partition on the device, or from a RAM disk? I've looked into using PRAM, for example (https://lwn.net/Articles/561330/) to store the ISO in a persistent RAM disk, but the feature appears to be a non-standard, beta feature at best. My alternative is to attempt to kexec + ISO boot from an encrypted partition (i.e. "/dev/mapper/ubuntu--vg-root"), which I'm not sure is possible/supported, as I'm not permitted to have non-encrypted partitions or USB thumb drives on the server I'm currently testing this on. Thank you.