I ran into this also.
back up to an older kernel. At least that was my solution till a kernel
came out that would boot.
It seems that some kernel builds are not friendly to xen.
On 03/28/2017 05:55 PM, PJ Welsh wrote:
The mystery gets more interesting... I now have a CentOS 7.3 Dell R710
server doing the exact same thing of rebooting immediately after the
Xen kernel load. Just to note this is a second system and not just the
first system with an update. I hope I'm not introducing something odd.
They only "interesting" thing I have done for historical reasons is to
change the following /etc/sysconfig/grub line:
GRUB_CMDLINE_XEN_DEFAULT="dom0_mem=6G,max:8G cpuinfo com1=115200,8n1
console=com1,tty loglvl=all guest_loglvl=all"
But I've done that on other servers without issue. In fact I have a
Dell R710 that DOES work with CentOS 7 and the new kernel... so confused.
On Fri, Mar 24, 2017 at 1:44 PM, Sarah Newman <s...@prgmr.com
<mailto:s...@prgmr.com>> wrote:
On 03/24/2017 11:35 AM, PJ Welsh wrote:
> As a follow up I was able to test fresh install on Dell R710 and
a Dell
> R620 with success on CentOS 7.3 without issue on the new
kernel. My new
> plan will be to just move this C6 to one of the C7 I just created.
That sounds like a compiler problem, since I think the C6 and C7
kernels are built from the same source.
--Sarah
_______________________________________________
CentOS-virt mailing list
CentOS-virt@centos.org <mailto:CentOS-virt@centos.org>
https://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos-virt
<https://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos-virt>
_______________________________________________
CentOS-virt mailing list
CentOS-virt@centos.org
https://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos-virt
--
Alvin Starr || voice: (905)513-7688
Netvel Inc. || Cell: (416)806-0133
al...@netvel.net ||
_______________________________________________
CentOS-virt mailing list
CentOS-virt@centos.org
https://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos-virt