Ron Hartikka wrote: > Hi Group, > > I took a picture and used OCR. > Is it enough to give you an idea of what is wrong? > I seemed to have no issues through Chapter 8. > I also installed everything in 9.3 except gptfdisk and parted. > > Any guidance appreciated, > Ron > > ____________________________________ > > 63.156739] C<cll8a6c8>] ? SyS_nknod+6x28/8x38 > 63.156736] E<cl9c7fc2>] nount_root+8xf3/6xfb > 63.156736] C<cll8a838>] ? SyS.unlink+0x18/9x26 > 63.1567361 Kcl9c817a>l ? initrd_ 1 oad +8x43/8x47 > 63.159736] [<cl9c89e9>] prepare_nanespace*6xllf/6xl59 > 63.159736] [<cl8fc848>] ? SyS_access +8x29/8x39 > 63.1597361 [<cl9c7bb3>] kernel_init_freeable+0xlb7/0xlc4 > 63.1597391 t<cl9c74cl>] ? do_early_paran+0x78/0x78 > 63.1567361 Kcl6e?fdb>] kerne1_init+exb/8x148 > 63.1567361 [<c1785317>1 ret_fron_kernel_thread+0xlb/0x28 > 63.1567361 [<cl6e?fd8>] ? rest_ init+8x68/8x68 > *63.1567361 drm_kms_helper: panic occurred, switching back to text console* > 63.266161] -1 cut here 1-
The most common reason for kernel panics during boot is that one or more drivers are not built into the kernel. Typically the missing drivers are ext, pci, or sata. Make sure they are =y and not =m. I see you have a 32-bit system. What's the output of lspci and how did you format your root partition? -- Bruce -- http://linuxfromscratch.org/mailman/listinfo/lfs-support FAQ: http://www.linuxfromscratch.org/lfs/faq.html Unsubscribe: See the above information page