I just googled grub configuration to make sure.

Unless you explicitly embed the grub menu configuration options in the grub
image, grub loads its configuration file from /boot/grub/grub.cnf.

This means that system bios provides access to the storage device
containing the boot files.

Hardware device drivers and other features that must be compiled into the
kernel also do not show 'm' as an option the kernel configuration menu.

However, I'm not exactly sure what runlevel, but from the stage where the
kernel gets in control of handling the devices and the filesystem, from
there on the right kernel objects for handling this must be available,
loaded and initialized.
Op 23 aug. 2014 16:57 schreef "Ken Moffat" <[email protected]> het
volgende:

> On Sat, Aug 23, 2014 at 03:15:46PM +0200, Ronnie van Aarle wrote:
> > One last thing, there is no need to change your kernel modules from
> linked
> > to builtin. They are stored in /boot/modules and if you see the four
> > penquins, this means grub is setup right and your system has acces to
> that
> > path.
>
>  That is not correct.  If you see the penguins, that ONLY means grub
> has loaded a kernel (with framebuffer support), and that kernel has
> started to initialise itself.
>
>  In LFS, we do not use an initrd so everything which is required
> before modules can be loaded MUST be built in.  The primary things
> are the correct device drivers for your disk controller(s), and the
> filesystems.
>
>  Under SCSI device support on a typical recent x86 machine, enable
> SCSI disk support, SCSI CDROM support, SCSI generic support (the
> last two are for the CD/DVD device, so that you can burn a backup).
>
>  Within Serial ATA and Parallel ATA drivers (libata) enable whatever
> matches your hardware.  In a distro, use lsmod to see what got
> loaded or lspci -v and google to see what chipsets you have, and
> which drivers they use.
>
>  Anything which is not needed before userspace has been brought up
> (e.g. the network driver) can be a module.
>
> ĸen
> --
> Nanny Ogg usually went to bed early. After all, she was an old lady.
> Sometimes she went to bed as early as 6 a.m.
> --
> http://lists.linuxfromscratch.org/listinfo/lfs-support
> FAQ: http://www.linuxfromscratch.org/blfs/faq.html
> Unsubscribe: See the above information page
>
-- 
http://lists.linuxfromscratch.org/listinfo/lfs-support
FAQ: http://www.linuxfromscratch.org/blfs/faq.html
Unsubscribe: See the above information page

Reply via email to