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* [gentoo-user] Zombie Linux kernel
@ 2025-01-30 17:49 gevisz
  2025-01-30 21:29 ` Grant Taylor
  0 siblings, 1 reply; 5+ messages in thread
From: gevisz @ 2025-01-30 17:49 UTC (permalink / raw
  To: gentoo-user

I have not updated my Gentoo system since May 31, 2024,
so in the middle of October 2024 I had to install it anew.

Just to remind you: during that time we all had to switch
to the new Gentoo profile scheme, which made an update
from my old system more difficult than a new install.

During this new Gentoo install, I also moved
from ext4 to XFS for / and to ZFS for /home.

On October 26, I compiled a new Linux kernel.
It had version 6.6.52 and worked quite well.

However, with time it disappeared from the Gentoo portage tree.
So, 11 days ago I compiled kernel version 6.6.62 and successfully
booted my Gentoo system with it over the next 9 days.

The old kernel of version 6.6.52 was deleted from the /boot
directory just after compilation of kernel version 6.6.62 just
because it could not support my home ZFS disks any more
(because zfs-kmod should be compiled against the specific
kernel version and would not work with another one).

But yesterday, after booting my Gentoo system, the
uname -a
command reported that I have been booted with
the deleted old kernel version 6.6.52 compiled on October 26, 2024!
And, of course, it did not mount my ZFS /home.

An additional indication that it was the old kernel of version 6.6.52
was that the command lsmod showed that the XFS module was loaded,
while I had compiled it into the new kernel of version 6.6.62
no longer as a loadable module but as a part of the kernel itself.

I have double checked everything: the old kernel of version 6.6.52
together with its initramfs have been deleted from the /boot directory.
Moreover, just a day before I deleted /usr/lib/modules/6.6.52-gentoo/ directory.

I tried to reboot and found out that GRUB menu had only an option
of loading the old kernel of version 6.6.52.

However, I soon understood that the latter was because I have attached
additional HDD before booting my Gentoo system, and as a result of this
the system decided to boot from another HDD where I have not installed
a new GRUB file. So, I fixed it and my Gentoo system was finally able
to boot with the new kernel of version 6.6.62.

But the mystery of loading my Gentoo system with deleted kernel
and deleted modules remains. How could that happen at all?

My only explanation is that XFS actually had not deleted the old kernel
and the modules directory but only marked them as such. So, the old
GRUB file could load them even when they had been marked as deleted.
But is this explanation actually correct?


^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 5+ messages in thread

* Re: [gentoo-user] Zombie Linux kernel
  2025-01-30 17:49 [gentoo-user] Zombie Linux kernel gevisz
@ 2025-01-30 21:29 ` Grant Taylor
  2025-01-30 22:49   ` gevisz
  0 siblings, 1 reply; 5+ messages in thread
From: Grant Taylor @ 2025-01-30 21:29 UTC (permalink / raw
  To: gentoo-user

On 1/30/25 11:49 AM, gevisz wrote:
> I have not updated my Gentoo system since May 31, 2024, so in the 
> middle of October 2024 I had to install it anew.

Why did you have to install it anew?

I've pulled Gentoo systems more than three years forward.  I've talked 
about how to do it on this mailing list in the past, including the 
scripts that I was using at the time.

I posted about pulling a system last updated in March '21 to current 
last November.

https://oldbytes.space/@drscriptt/113460218243172979

In short, switch to a git based Gentoo repo and do a bunch of tiny jumps 
from the last update you did through current.  It takes time and does a 
LOT of compilation.  But it works.

> Just to remind you: during that time we all had to switch to the new 
> Gentoo profile scheme, which made an update from my old system more 
> difficult than a new install.

I'm not able to log in and check the profile the system is on.  But I 
feel like I could have handled the profile change in December '24 just 
like I could have when the profile change came out.  The repo just 
needed to have the branch checked out that was shortly after when the 
profile came out.

> On October 26, I compiled a new Linux kernel.  It had version 6.6.52 
> and worked quite well.
> 
> However, with time it disappeared from the Gentoo portage tree.  So, 
> 11 days ago I compiled kernel version 6.6.62 and successfully booted 
> my Gentoo system with it over the next 9 days.
> 
> The old kernel of version 6.6.52 was deleted from the /boot directory 
> just after compilation of kernel version 6.6.62 just because it could 
> not support my home ZFS disks any more (because zfs-kmod should be 
> compiled against the specific kernel version and would not work with 
> another one).

Um ... kernel modules are kernel version dependent.  You should have had 
two different kernel modules, one for each kernel.

/lib/modules/6.6.52.../zfs.ko
/lib/modules/6.6.62.../zfs.ko

> But yesterday, after booting my Gentoo system, the uname -a command 
> reported that I have been booted with the deleted old kernel version 
> 6.6.52 compiled on October 26, 2024!  And, of course, it did not 
> mount my ZFS /home.

So the kernel is still there.

Did you manually delete the zfs / spl kernel modules?

I've had various other types of things break zfs / spl kernel module 
compatibility even in the same version.  I'd have to look at my motes of 
what I do to get the module to work again.  I think it usually involves 
a round of make bzImage modules modules_prepare, and re-emerging the zfs 
kmodule.  But I may be mis-remembering.

> I have double checked everything: the old kernel of version 6.6.52 
> together with its initramfs have been deleted from the /boot directory. 
> Moreover, just a day before I deleted /usr/lib/modules/6.6.52-gentoo/ 
> directory.

initramfs complicate things and I tend to not use them.  They have their 
own modules and other things in them.  They are usually based off of the 
current system but can get out of sync relatively easily.  So you could 
have modules coming from the initramfs and not the root file system.

> I tried to reboot and found out that GRUB menu had only an option of 
> loading the old kernel of version 6.6.52.

Did you try going to the GRUB command line and modifying it to match 
what should have been on the system?

I've found that contemporary GRUB has tab completion and is generally 
nicer to work with than older Korn shells.

> However, I soon understood that the latter was because I have attached 
> additional HDD before booting my Gentoo system, and as a result of 
> this the system decided to boot from another HDD where I have not 
> installed a new GRUB file. So, I fixed it and my Gentoo system was 
> finally able to boot with the new kernel of version 6.6.62.

Ya, device ordering can be a problem.  That's one of the main reasons 
that I like UUIDs to identify file systems et al.  If you can get the 
boot loader to start off of the correct disk, you're usually in  place 
that you can pull yourself up by your boot straps.

> But the mystery of loading my Gentoo system with deleted kernel and 
> deleted modules remains. How could that happen at all?

The kernel and modules are somewhere that GRUB found them lest it 
wouldn't have booted them.

> My only explanation is that XFS actually had not deleted the old kernel 
> and the modules directory but only marked them as such. So, the old 
> GRUB file could load them even when they had been marked as deleted. 
> But is this explanation actually correct?

I don't know that it's not correct, but I am very suspicious of it.  I 
would expect that GRUB's support for XFS would look at files that aren't 
marked for deletion.

There are a number of things that come to mind that are pure speculation 
if you're no longer in that configuration to be able to look.  Not the 
least of which is files in file systems on different devices; e.g. /boot 
vs /.  Have a file in the /boot directory on the / (root) file system 
and it will be covered up when the /boot file system is mounted.  Or 
something like that.



-- 
Grant. . . .


^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 5+ messages in thread

* Re: [gentoo-user] Zombie Linux kernel
  2025-01-30 21:29 ` Grant Taylor
@ 2025-01-30 22:49   ` gevisz
  2025-01-30 22:55     ` gevisz
  2025-01-31  0:26     ` Grant Taylor
  0 siblings, 2 replies; 5+ messages in thread
From: gevisz @ 2025-01-30 22:49 UTC (permalink / raw
  To: gentoo-user

чт, 30 янв. 2025 г. в 23:31, Grant Taylor <gtaylor@gentoo.tnetconsulting.net>:
>
> On 1/30/25 11:49 AM, gevisz wrote:
> > I have not updated my Gentoo system since May 31, 2024, so in the
> > middle of October 2024 I had to install it anew.
>
> Why did you have to install it anew?

Because, as I wrote it, it was easier than to try to change a profile
with the procedure described in the corresponding news. Moreover,
it was written in the same news that the result is not guaranteed.
So, why to do a lot of compilation just to try if it will work, while
I did knew that starting from scratch I will get the guaranteed
result with less compilation.

> I've pulled Gentoo systems more than three years forward.  I've talked
> about how to do it on this mailing list in the past, including the
> scripts that I was using at the time.
>
> I posted about pulling a system last updated in March '21 to current
> last November.
>
> https://oldbytes.space/@drscriptt/113460218243172979
>
> In short, switch to a git based Gentoo repo and do a bunch of tiny jumps
> from the last update you did through current.  It takes time and does a
> LOT of compilation.  But it works.
>
> > Just to remind you: during that time we all had to switch to the new
> > Gentoo profile scheme, which made an update from my old system more
> > difficult than a new install.
>
> I'm not able to log in and check the profile the system is on.  But I
> feel like I could have handled the profile change in December '24 just
> like I could have when the profile change came out.  The repo just
> needed to have the branch checked out that was shortly after when the
> profile came out.
>
> > On October 26, I compiled a new Linux kernel.  It had version 6.6.52
> > and worked quite well.
> >
> > However, with time it disappeared from the Gentoo portage tree.  So,
> > 11 days ago I compiled kernel version 6.6.62 and successfully booted
> > my Gentoo system with it over the next 9 days.
> >
> > The old kernel of version 6.6.52 was deleted from the /boot directory
> > just after compilation of kernel version 6.6.62 just because it could
> > not support my home ZFS disks any more (because zfs-kmod should be
> > compiled against the specific kernel version and would not work with
> > another one).
>
> Um ... kernel modules are kernel version dependent.  You should have had
> two different kernel modules, one for each kernel.
>
> /lib/modules/6.6.52.../zfs.ko
> /lib/modules/6.6.62.../zfs.ko

Well, maybe you are right. I did know this and so deleted the old kernel
immediately after compiling the new one.

> > But yesterday, after booting my Gentoo system, the uname -a command
> > reported that I have been booted with the deleted old kernel version
> > 6.6.52 compiled on October 26, 2024!  And, of course, it did not
> > mount my ZFS /home.
>
> So the kernel is still there.
>
> Did you manually delete the zfs / spl kernel modules?

Yes, I manually deleted the /usr/lib/modules/6.6.52-gentoo/
directory just before the last shutdown before this happened.
Moreover, at the same time I manually deleted everything from
directory /usr/src/linux-6.6.52-gentoo/ except for the .config file.

> I've had various other types of things break zfs / spl kernel module
> compatibility even in the same version.  I'd have to look at my motes of
> what I do to get the module to work again.  I think it usually involves
> a round of make bzImage modules modules_prepare, and re-emerging the zfs
> kmodule.  But I may be mis-remembering.

So far, I had no problems with incompatibility of the kernel and the ZFS
kernel module. But I always followed the instruction to recompile zfs-kmod
after compiling the kernel.

> > I have double checked everything: the old kernel of version 6.6.52
> > together with its initramfs have been deleted from the /boot directory.
> > Moreover, just a day before I deleted /usr/lib/modules/6.6.52-gentoo/
> > directory.
>
> initramfs complicate things and I tend to not use them.  They have their
> own modules and other things in them.  They are usually based off of the
> current system but can get out of sync relatively easily.  So you could
> have modules coming from the initramfs and not the root file system.

I do not know if I needed it taking into account that I have compiled
the XFS module into the kernel. But I have created
initramfs-6.6.62-gentoo.img
file with the command
genkernel --install initramfs
and I hope that the genkernel was wise enough to create it based
on the /usr/lib/modules/6.6.62-gentoo/ directory and not the
/usr/lib/modules/6.6.52-gentoo/ directory that still was present at that time.

Maybe, the file /boot/vmlinuz-6.6.52-gentoo also was present at the time
of creating initramfs-6.6.62-gentoo.img but I definitely deleted
/boot/vmlinuz-6.6.52-gentoo just after that.

> > I tried to reboot and found out that GRUB menu had only an option of
> > loading the old kernel of version 6.6.52.
>
> Did you try going to the GRUB command line and modifying it to match
> what should have been on the system?

No, I never did it in my life even with online documentation present,
so I even have not tried to do it with just a GRUB command line before me.

All that I managed to do is just to recall the commands
grub-mkconfig -o /boot/grub/grub.cfg
and
grub-install /dev/sdc
and executed them.

> I've found that contemporary GRUB has tab completion and is generally
> nicer to work with than older Korn shells.
>
> > However, I soon understood that the latter was because I have attached
> > additional HDD before booting my Gentoo system, and as a result of
> > this the system decided to boot from another HDD where I have not
> > installed a new GRUB file. So, I fixed it and my Gentoo system was
> > finally able to boot with the new kernel of version 6.6.62.
>
> Ya, device ordering can be a problem.  That's one of the main reasons
> that I like UUIDs to identify file systems et al.  If you can get the
> boot loader to start off of the correct disk, you're usually in  place
> that you can pull yourself up by your boot straps.

But, as far as I know, the UUID does not help to identify the disk,
from which the system starts as it is managed by BIOS.

> > But the mystery of loading my Gentoo system with deleted kernel and
> > deleted modules remains. How could that happen at all?
>
> The kernel and modules are somewhere that GRUB found them lest it
> wouldn't have booted them.

But they have not been present in the /boot/ directory,
nor in /usr/lib/ directory, nor in the /usr/src/ directory.

> > My only explanation is that XFS actually had not deleted the old kernel
> > and the modules directory but only marked them as such. So, the old
> > GRUB file could load them even when they had been marked as deleted.
> > But is this explanation actually correct?
>
> I don't know that it's not correct, but I am very suspicious of it.  I
> would expect that GRUB's support for XFS would look at files that aren't
> marked for deletion.

I do agree with you that such an explanation is at least strange.
However, I do not have any other.

My alternative explanation was that the uname -a command was actually
accessing not the current kernel but the GRUB logs. However, it would be
extremely strange and was refuted by the fact that XFS kernel module
was loaded into memory according to lsmod.

Currently, with my new kernel loaded, lsmod does not report XFS kernel
module being loaded into the memory.

> There are a number of things that come to mind that are pure speculation
> if you're no longer in that configuration to be able to look.  Not the
> least of which is files in file systems on different devices; e.g. /boot
> vs /.  Have a file in the /boot directory on the / (root) file system
> and it will be covered up when the /boot file system is mounted.  Or
> something like that.

I have not created a separate partition for the /boot directory.
It is located in the / (root) partition. So, there is nothing to shadow it.

I have also checked the other disk partitions. Some of them do have
the /boot directory but neither of them contains the kernel 6.6.52.
They do contain much older kernel versions.


^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 5+ messages in thread

* Re: [gentoo-user] Zombie Linux kernel
  2025-01-30 22:49   ` gevisz
@ 2025-01-30 22:55     ` gevisz
  2025-01-31  0:26     ` Grant Taylor
  1 sibling, 0 replies; 5+ messages in thread
From: gevisz @ 2025-01-30 22:55 UTC (permalink / raw
  To: gentoo-user

Correction: My second paragraph in the last email should read:
"Well, maybe you are right. I did NOT know this and so deleted the old kernel
immediately after compiling the new one."

пт, 31 янв. 2025 г. в 00:49, gevisz <gevisz@gmail.com>:
>
> чт, 30 янв. 2025 г. в 23:31, Grant Taylor <gtaylor@gentoo.tnetconsulting.net>:
> >
> > On 1/30/25 11:49 AM, gevisz wrote:
> > > I have not updated my Gentoo system since May 31, 2024, so in the
> > > middle of October 2024 I had to install it anew.
> >
> > Why did you have to install it anew?
>
> Because, as I wrote it, it was easier than to try to change a profile
> with the procedure described in the corresponding news. Moreover,
> it was written in the same news that the result is not guaranteed.
> So, why to do a lot of compilation just to try if it will work, while
> I did knew that starting from scratch I will get the guaranteed
> result with less compilation.
>
> > I've pulled Gentoo systems more than three years forward.  I've talked
> > about how to do it on this mailing list in the past, including the
> > scripts that I was using at the time.
> >
> > I posted about pulling a system last updated in March '21 to current
> > last November.
> >
> > https://oldbytes.space/@drscriptt/113460218243172979
> >
> > In short, switch to a git based Gentoo repo and do a bunch of tiny jumps
> > from the last update you did through current.  It takes time and does a
> > LOT of compilation.  But it works.
> >
> > > Just to remind you: during that time we all had to switch to the new
> > > Gentoo profile scheme, which made an update from my old system more
> > > difficult than a new install.
> >
> > I'm not able to log in and check the profile the system is on.  But I
> > feel like I could have handled the profile change in December '24 just
> > like I could have when the profile change came out.  The repo just
> > needed to have the branch checked out that was shortly after when the
> > profile came out.
> >
> > > On October 26, I compiled a new Linux kernel.  It had version 6.6.52
> > > and worked quite well.
> > >
> > > However, with time it disappeared from the Gentoo portage tree.  So,
> > > 11 days ago I compiled kernel version 6.6.62 and successfully booted
> > > my Gentoo system with it over the next 9 days.
> > >
> > > The old kernel of version 6.6.52 was deleted from the /boot directory
> > > just after compilation of kernel version 6.6.62 just because it could
> > > not support my home ZFS disks any more (because zfs-kmod should be
> > > compiled against the specific kernel version and would not work with
> > > another one).
> >
> > Um ... kernel modules are kernel version dependent.  You should have had
> > two different kernel modules, one for each kernel.
> >
> > /lib/modules/6.6.52.../zfs.ko
> > /lib/modules/6.6.62.../zfs.ko
>
> Well, maybe you are right. I did know this and so deleted the old kernel
> immediately after compiling the new one.
>
> > > But yesterday, after booting my Gentoo system, the uname -a command
> > > reported that I have been booted with the deleted old kernel version
> > > 6.6.52 compiled on October 26, 2024!  And, of course, it did not
> > > mount my ZFS /home.
> >
> > So the kernel is still there.
> >
> > Did you manually delete the zfs / spl kernel modules?
>
> Yes, I manually deleted the /usr/lib/modules/6.6.52-gentoo/
> directory just before the last shutdown before this happened.
> Moreover, at the same time I manually deleted everything from
> directory /usr/src/linux-6.6.52-gentoo/ except for the .config file.
>
> > I've had various other types of things break zfs / spl kernel module
> > compatibility even in the same version.  I'd have to look at my motes of
> > what I do to get the module to work again.  I think it usually involves
> > a round of make bzImage modules modules_prepare, and re-emerging the zfs
> > kmodule.  But I may be mis-remembering.
>
> So far, I had no problems with incompatibility of the kernel and the ZFS
> kernel module. But I always followed the instruction to recompile zfs-kmod
> after compiling the kernel.
>
> > > I have double checked everything: the old kernel of version 6.6.52
> > > together with its initramfs have been deleted from the /boot directory.
> > > Moreover, just a day before I deleted /usr/lib/modules/6.6.52-gentoo/
> > > directory.
> >
> > initramfs complicate things and I tend to not use them.  They have their
> > own modules and other things in them.  They are usually based off of the
> > current system but can get out of sync relatively easily.  So you could
> > have modules coming from the initramfs and not the root file system.
>
> I do not know if I needed it taking into account that I have compiled
> the XFS module into the kernel. But I have created
> initramfs-6.6.62-gentoo.img
> file with the command
> genkernel --install initramfs
> and I hope that the genkernel was wise enough to create it based
> on the /usr/lib/modules/6.6.62-gentoo/ directory and not the
> /usr/lib/modules/6.6.52-gentoo/ directory that still was present at that time.
>
> Maybe, the file /boot/vmlinuz-6.6.52-gentoo also was present at the time
> of creating initramfs-6.6.62-gentoo.img but I definitely deleted
> /boot/vmlinuz-6.6.52-gentoo just after that.
>
> > > I tried to reboot and found out that GRUB menu had only an option of
> > > loading the old kernel of version 6.6.52.
> >
> > Did you try going to the GRUB command line and modifying it to match
> > what should have been on the system?
>
> No, I never did it in my life even with online documentation present,
> so I even have not tried to do it with just a GRUB command line before me.
>
> All that I managed to do is just to recall the commands
> grub-mkconfig -o /boot/grub/grub.cfg
> and
> grub-install /dev/sdc
> and executed them.
>
> > I've found that contemporary GRUB has tab completion and is generally
> > nicer to work with than older Korn shells.
> >
> > > However, I soon understood that the latter was because I have attached
> > > additional HDD before booting my Gentoo system, and as a result of
> > > this the system decided to boot from another HDD where I have not
> > > installed a new GRUB file. So, I fixed it and my Gentoo system was
> > > finally able to boot with the new kernel of version 6.6.62.
> >
> > Ya, device ordering can be a problem.  That's one of the main reasons
> > that I like UUIDs to identify file systems et al.  If you can get the
> > boot loader to start off of the correct disk, you're usually in  place
> > that you can pull yourself up by your boot straps.
>
> But, as far as I know, the UUID does not help to identify the disk,
> from which the system starts as it is managed by BIOS.
>
> > > But the mystery of loading my Gentoo system with deleted kernel and
> > > deleted modules remains. How could that happen at all?
> >
> > The kernel and modules are somewhere that GRUB found them lest it
> > wouldn't have booted them.
>
> But they have not been present in the /boot/ directory,
> nor in /usr/lib/ directory, nor in the /usr/src/ directory.
>
> > > My only explanation is that XFS actually had not deleted the old kernel
> > > and the modules directory but only marked them as such. So, the old
> > > GRUB file could load them even when they had been marked as deleted.
> > > But is this explanation actually correct?
> >
> > I don't know that it's not correct, but I am very suspicious of it.  I
> > would expect that GRUB's support for XFS would look at files that aren't
> > marked for deletion.
>
> I do agree with you that such an explanation is at least strange.
> However, I do not have any other.
>
> My alternative explanation was that the uname -a command was actually
> accessing not the current kernel but the GRUB logs. However, it would be
> extremely strange and was refuted by the fact that XFS kernel module
> was loaded into memory according to lsmod.
>
> Currently, with my new kernel loaded, lsmod does not report XFS kernel
> module being loaded into the memory.
>
> > There are a number of things that come to mind that are pure speculation
> > if you're no longer in that configuration to be able to look.  Not the
> > least of which is files in file systems on different devices; e.g. /boot
> > vs /.  Have a file in the /boot directory on the / (root) file system
> > and it will be covered up when the /boot file system is mounted.  Or
> > something like that.
>
> I have not created a separate partition for the /boot directory.
> It is located in the / (root) partition. So, there is nothing to shadow it.
>
> I have also checked the other disk partitions. Some of them do have
> the /boot directory but neither of them contains the kernel 6.6.52.
> They do contain much older kernel versions.


^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 5+ messages in thread

* Re: [gentoo-user] Zombie Linux kernel
  2025-01-30 22:49   ` gevisz
  2025-01-30 22:55     ` gevisz
@ 2025-01-31  0:26     ` Grant Taylor
  1 sibling, 0 replies; 5+ messages in thread
From: Grant Taylor @ 2025-01-31  0:26 UTC (permalink / raw
  To: gentoo-user

On 1/30/25 16:49, gevisz wrote:
> Because, as I wrote it, it was easier than to try to change a profile 
> with the procedure described in the corresponding news.

I take that as you chose to do the fresh install, not that something 
forced you to do the fresh install.  It's perfectly fine if that's the 
choice you made.

> Moreover, it was written in the same news that the result is not 
> guaranteed.  So, why to do a lot of compilation just to try if it 
> will work, while I did knew that starting from scratch I will get 
> the guaranteed result with less compilation.

Each chooses their own.  ;-)

> Well, maybe you are right. I did (NOT) know this and so deleted the old 
> kernel immediately after compiling the new one.

Now you know for the next time.  :-)

> Yes, I manually deleted the /usr/lib/modules/6.6.52-gentoo/ directory 
> just before the last shutdown before this happened.  Moreover, 
> at the same time I manually deleted everything from directory 
> /usr/src/linux-6.6.52-gentoo/ except for the .config file.

I tend to keep my current and previous kernel source tree and module 
tree around for these very types of reasons.  At least if I'm not tight 
on disk space.

> So far, I had no problems with incompatibility of the kernel and the 
> ZFS kernel module. But I always followed the instruction to recompile 
> zfs-kmod after compiling the kernel.

Usually, the incompatibility is when I've made a big change in the 
kernel that can fundamentally alter things.  E.g. enabled / disabled an 
entire sub-system or made changes to any security related settings. 
That is usually the size of the change that needs to be made in the 
kernel config to render the existing ZFS / SPL module incompatible for 
me.  Smaller changes usually don't impact ZFS / SPL.

> I do not know if I needed it taking into account that I have 
> compiled the XFS module into the kernel. But I have created 
> initramfs-6.6.62-gentoo.img file with the command genkernel --install 
> initramfs and I hope that the genkernel was wise enough to create it 
> based on the /usr/lib/modules/6.6.62-gentoo/ directory and not the 
> /usr/lib/modules/6.6.52-gentoo/ directory that still was present at 
> that time.

I don't use initramfs so I can't say.  I try to keep what I need to boot 
and come up into single user mode in the kernel.  But I've run into this 
type of discrepancy on other people's systems.

> Maybe, the file /boot/vmlinuz-6.6.52-gentoo also was present at the 
> time of creating initramfs-6.6.62-gentoo.img but I definitely deleted 
> /boot/vmlinuz-6.6.52-gentoo just after that.
> 
> No, I never did it in my life even with online documentation present, 
> so I even have not tried to do it with just a GRUB command line 
> before me.

Unexpectedly getting dropped at a grub prompt when booting is never fun. 
  Some consider it a right of passage, sort of like accidentally 
rebooting the wrong system, or causing data loss in production.

> All that I managed to do is just to recall the commands
> grub-mkconfig -o /boot/grub/grub.cfg
> and
> grub-install /dev/sdc
> and executed them.
>  
> But, as far as I know, the UUID does not help to identify the disk, 
> from which the system starts as it is managed by BIOS.

Correct.

BIOS based booting is ... or can be annoyingly complicated.

> My alternative explanation was that the uname -a command was actually 
> accessing not the current kernel but the GRUB logs.

My understanding is that the kernel part of the uname command's output 
comes from the running kernel, not something on disk.

> Currently, with my new kernel loaded, lsmod does not report XFS kernel 
> module being loaded into the memory.

I would expect that XFS wouldn't show in the lsmod output if XFS is 
complied into the kernel.

Remember, lsmod shows modules dynamically loaded into the running 
kernel, not things complied in.



-- 
Grant. .  .


^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 5+ messages in thread

end of thread, other threads:[~2025-01-31  0:27 UTC | newest]

Thread overview: 5+ messages (download: mbox.gz follow: Atom feed
-- links below jump to the message on this page --
2025-01-30 17:49 [gentoo-user] Zombie Linux kernel gevisz
2025-01-30 21:29 ` Grant Taylor
2025-01-30 22:49   ` gevisz
2025-01-30 22:55     ` gevisz
2025-01-31  0:26     ` Grant Taylor

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