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- Explaining the dreaded "No init found." boot hang message
- =========================================================
- OK, so you've got this pretty unintuitive message (currently located
- in init/main.c) and are wondering what the H*** went wrong.
- Some high-level reasons for failure (listed roughly in order of execution)
- to load the init binary are:
- A) Unable to mount root FS
- B) init binary doesn't exist on rootfs
- C) broken console device
- D) binary exists but dependencies not available
- E) binary cannot be loaded
- Detailed explanations:
- A) Set "debug" kernel parameter (in bootloader config file or CONFIG_CMDLINE)
- to get more detailed kernel messages.
- B) make sure you have the correct root FS type
- (and ``root=`` kernel parameter points to the correct partition),
- required drivers such as storage hardware (such as SCSI or USB!)
- and filesystem (ext3, jffs2 etc.) are builtin (alternatively as modules,
- to be pre-loaded by an initrd)
- C) Possibly a conflict in ``console= setup`` --> initial console unavailable.
- E.g. some serial consoles are unreliable due to serial IRQ issues (e.g.
- missing interrupt-based configuration).
- Try using a different ``console= device`` or e.g. ``netconsole=``.
- D) e.g. required library dependencies of the init binary such as
- ``/lib/ld-linux.so.2`` missing or broken. Use
- ``readelf -d <INIT>|grep NEEDED`` to find out which libraries are required.
- E) make sure the binary's architecture matches your hardware.
- E.g. i386 vs. x86_64 mismatch, or trying to load x86 on ARM hardware.
- In case you tried loading a non-binary file here (shell script?),
- you should make sure that the script specifies an interpreter in its shebang
- header line (``#!/...``) that is fully working (including its library
- dependencies). And before tackling scripts, better first test a simple
- non-script binary such as ``/bin/sh`` and confirm its successful execution.
- To find out more, add code ``to init/main.c`` to display kernel_execve()s
- return values.
- Please extend this explanation whenever you find new failure causes
- (after all loading the init binary is a CRITICAL and hard transition step
- which needs to be made as painless as possible), then submit patch to LKML.
- Further TODOs:
- - Implement the various ``run_init_process()`` invocations via a struct array
- which can then store the ``kernel_execve()`` result value and on failure
- log it all by iterating over **all** results (very important usability fix).
- - try to make the implementation itself more helpful in general,
- e.g. by providing additional error messages at affected places.
- Andreas Mohr <andi at lisas period de>
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