On Mon, Mar 03, 2025 at 03:58:30PM +0100, Eric wrote: > Hi Niklas > > Le 03/03/2025 à 07:25, Niklas Cassel a écrit : > > So far, this just sounds like a bug where UEFI cannot detect your SSD. > Bit it is detected during cold boot, though. > > UEFI problems should be reported to your BIOS vendor. > I'll try to see what can be done, however I am not sure how responsive they > will be for this board... > > > > It would be interesting to see if _Linux_ can detect your SSD, after a > > reboot, without UEFI involvement. > > > > If you kexec into the same kernel as you are currently running: > > https://manpages.debian.org/testing/kexec-tools/kexec.8.en.html > > > > Do you see your SSD in the kexec'd kernel? > > Sorry, I've tried that using several methods (systemctl kexec / kexec --load > + kexec -e / kexec --load + shutdown --reboot now) and it failed each time. > I *don't* think it is related to this bug, however, because each time the > process got stuck just after displaying "kexec_core: Starting new kernel". I just tired (as root): # kexec -l /boot/vmlinuz-6.13.5-200.fc41.x86_64 --initrd=/boot/initramfs-6.13.5-200.fc41.x86_64.img --reuse-cmd # kexec -e and FWIW, kexec worked fine. Did you specify an initrd ? did you specify --reuse-cmd ? If not, please try it. It would be interesting to see if Linux can detect your SATA drive after a kexec. If it can't, then we need to report the issue to your drive vendor (Samsung). Kind regards, Niklas