[Bug 1870189] Re: initramfs does not get loaded
David Baird
1870189 at bugs.launchpad.net
Tue May 12 01:50:35 UTC 2020
Thanks for the information @vorlon. I think that makes sense.
What would be the solution for booting focal-server-cloudimg-amd64.img
with libvirt (virt-install) (so, not on Azure, as the OP was; so, I
think the issue is now fractured into two separate issues with same
underlying cause)?
Thanks.
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https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/1870189
Title:
initramfs does not get loaded
Status in grub2 package in Ubuntu:
Won't Fix
Status in linux-azure package in Ubuntu:
Confirmed
Bug description:
A Gen-1 Ubuntu 19.10 VM on Azure was created and upgraded to Ubuntu
20.04 by “do-release-upgrade –d”.
Then the latest Ubuntu v5.6 kernel was installed from
https://kernel.ubuntu.com/~kernel-ppa/mainline/v5.6/. As soon as a
reboot was performed, a panic with the v5.6 kernel occured because the
rootfs can not be found.
It turns out by default, initramfs does not get loaded:
/boot/grub/grub.cfg:
menuentry 'Ubuntu' --class ubuntu --class gnu-linux --class gnu --class os $menuentry_id_option 'gnulinux-simple-3d2737e8-
b95a-42bf-bac1-bb6fb4cda87f' {
…
if [ "${initrdfail}" = 1 ]; then
linux /boot/vmlinuz-5.6.0-050600-generic root=PARTUUID=bc3d472f-401e-4774-affa-df1acba65a73 ro console=tty1 console=ttyS0 earlyprintk=ttyS0 ignore_loglevel sysrq_always_enabled unknown_nmi_panic
initrd /boot/initrd.img-5.6.0-050600-generic
else
linux /boot/vmlinuz-5.6.0-050600-generic root=PARTUUID=bc3d472f-401e-4774-affa-df1acba65a73 ro console=tty1 console=ttyS0 earlyprintk=ttyS0 ignore_loglevel sysrq_always_enabled unknown_nmi_panic panic=-1
#Dexuan: here the initrd line is missing!
fi
initrdfail
}
As we can see, Ubuntu only uses the initrd.img if initrdfail=1. Normally, initrdfail = 0, so when we boot the v5.6 kernel for the first time, we must hit the “fail to mount rootfs” panic and the kernel will automatically reboot….
Also, the “initrdfail” here marks initrdfail=1, so when the kernel
boots for the 2nd time, the kernel should successfully boot up. Next,
when the kernel boots for the 3rd time, it panics again since the
userspace program resets initrdfail to 0, and next time when the
kernel boots, it can boot up successfully -- this
“panic/success/panic/success” pattern repeats forever…
The linux-azure kernels are not affected since they have the vmbus driver and storage drivers built-in (i.e. “=y”):
/boot/config-5.3.0-1013-azure:CONFIG_HYPERV_STORAGE=y
/boot/config-5.3.0-1013-azure:CONFIG_HYPERV=y
/boot/config-5.4.0-1006-azure:CONFIG_HYPERV_STORAGE=y
/boot/config-5.4.0-1006-azure:CONFIG_HYPERV=y
/boot/config-5.6.0-050600-generic:CONFIG_HYPERV_STORAGE=m
/boot/config-5.6.0-050600-generic:CONFIG_HYPERV=m
The v5.6 kernel uses =m rather than =y, so is affected here.
It looks the setting may be intentional, but we should not assume a customer kernel must have the necessary vmbus/storage drivers built-in.
This issue only happens to the Ubuntu Marketplace image (19.10 and maybe 19.04 as well?) on Azure.
We installed a Ubuntu 20.04 VM from the .iso file from http://cdimage.ubuntu.com/daily-live/pending/ and don’t see the strange grub issue.
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