Erick Perez wrote:> Hi,
> I just changed the motherboard of a centos 4.4 installation for a new
> one. this new one has a SIS chipset.
> Now when i boot from the hard disk i get a kernel panic (unable to find
> root, no hdd found , etc)
>
> I have identified the module I need to load to make centos "see"
the
> disks. Now the question is what do I need to modify in my existing
> installation, to tell centos to use the new sis module and to *not* use
> the old intel?
>
> Thanks,
I recently had to do pretty much the same thing, i.e. moved a hard drive
from an Intel-chipset-based box to an AND-64 box with an nVidia chipset.
The error you are getting is probably because your initrd file does
not contain the driver for hard drive controller on the new motherboard.
This is pretty much expected if you are using SATA or SCSI drives and
change motherboard chipsets or disk adapters.
The basic steps to fix this are (1) identify the required storage
driver, (2) modify the modprobe.conf file to reflect that driver, and
(3) rebuild the initial RAMdisk file. To do this you need to boot the
first disk of your CentOS distribution disk in rescue mode.
As mentioned, boot the system up using the first disk of the
distribution (or the DVD or the single-disk server CD). At the boot
prompt, enter 'linux rescue'. Note the messages while it loads drivers
and you should see it load the storage driver for your storage adapter
(usually in a white box on a blue screen). You'll need this later.
Don't bother starting the network interface yet, but do let it mount the
existing CentOS installation.
If you didn't notice the driver loading, use the 'lsmod' command
from
the command prompt to get a list of loaded drivers. You should be able
to figure it out from that.
Next change your default directory to /mnt/sysimage/etc and look at the
file modprobe.conf. You should see a line with something like 'alias
scsi_hostadapter {something}' that defines the primary SCSI/SATA
adapter. You should substitute the driver for the disk drive controller
for {something}. You might also comment out some of the other stuff,
like USB controller or sound cards, but kudzu should take care of them
later.
Next you need to rebuild the initrd file. You need to chroot to the
mounted original installation by issuing the command 'chroot
/mnt/sysimage'. Now issue the command 'cd /boot' to get to the
correct
directory. You should see the kernel and initrd files there. If not,
something went wrong earlier on and you should retrace your steps.
You should now move the old initrd file out of the way use the mkinitrd
command to rebuild the initrd file for the kernel you intend to boot.
The format is:
mkinitrd {initrd filename} {kernel version}
If you are using kernel 2.6.9-42.0.10.EL, use 'mkinitrd
initrd-2.6.9-42.0.10.EL.img 2.6.9-42.0.10.EL'. If you get an error
stating the file already exists, just move the old one out of the way
(mv initrd-2.6.9-42.0.10.EL.img initrd-2.6.9-42.0.10.EL.img.old) and
rerun the mkinitrd command.
You are just about done now. Exit out of the chroot enviromnent using
the 'exit' command, then do a clean shutdown of the rescue environment.
Remove the CD, reboot the box, and you should get past the kernel
panic. I would recommend that you bring the box up in single-user mode
the first time just to make sure nothing gets started that might
"belch"
on you because of misconfigurations. Kudzu should run automatically and
will probably mention that a LOT of hardware devices no longer exist,
just tell it to delete their configuration and let it finish up. Once
you get to the command prompt you can examine /etc/modprobe.conf to see
the changes it made. If all your partitions appear to be mounted,
reboot again and you should be good-to-go.
This is pretty general and I almost certainly have left out some
details. Perhaps others on the list could fill in some of the blanks.
Hope that helps!
--
Jay Leafey - Memphis, TN
jay.leafey at mindless.com
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