> From: Rob Landley [mailto:rob@xxxxxxxxxxx] > Sent: Tuesday, July 19, 2022 1:51 PM > On 7/19/22 01:55, Roberto Sassu wrote: > >> Thank you, I have tested that patch but the problem remained. Here is my > >> command line, I wonder if there is something wrong. > >> > >> Kernel command line: rw rootfstype=initramtmpfs root=/dev/ram0 > >> initrd=0x500000000 rootwait > > > > It is just initramtmpfs, without rootfstype=. > > Whoever wrote that patch really doesn't understand how this stuff works. I can > tell from the name. Hi Rob surely, I should have been more careful in choosing the name of the option. > Technically, initramfs is the loader, I.E. "init ramfs". The filesystem instance > is called "rootfs" (hence the name in /proc/mounts when the insane special case > the kernel added doesn't hide information from people, making all this harder to > understand for no obvious reason). Ok, thanks for the explanation. > ramfs and tmpfs are two different filesystems that COULD be used to implement > rootfs. (Last I checked they were the only ram backed filesystems in Linux.) Yes, that part I got it. > If a system administrator says they're going to install your server's root > partition using the "reiserxfs" filesystem, I would not be reassured. Definitely. [...] > P.P.S. If you want to run a command other than /init out of initramfs or initrd, > use the rdinit=/run/this option. Note the root= overmount mechanism is > completely different code and uses the init=/run/this argument instead, which > means nothing to initramfs. Again, specifying root= says we are NOT staying in > initramfs. Sorry, it was some time ago. I have to go back and see why we needed a separate option. Maybe omitting root= was impacting on mounting the real root filesystem. Will get that information. Intuitively, given that root= is consumed for example by dracut, it seems a safer choice to have an option to explicitly choose the desired filesystem. Roberto