On 03/12/2015 17:00, m.roth at 5-cent.us wrote: > Duncan Brown wrote: >> On 03/12/2015 14:29, Leon Fauster wrote: >>> Am 03.12.2015 um 15:06 schrieb Duncan Brown <centos2 at duncb.co.uk>: >>>> On 03/12/2015 13:54, Jonathan Billings wrote: >>>>> On Thu, Dec 03, 2015 at 01:44:47PM +0000, Duncan Brown wrote: >>>>>> The last message before it is "switching to clocksource hpet" >>>>>> >>>>>> Then the panic scrolls by >>>>>> >>>>>> I've no idea if that counts as later or not >>>>> It's unlikely to be a panic related to your hardware clock (HPET = >>>>> High Precision Event Timer), so it's probably when the kernel is >>>>> touching something else on your system. >>>>> >>>>> The content of the panic is really the only thing that can help. >>>>> >>>> That's what I figured, but how do I go about getting a copy of it? >>>> >>>> Most of it has scrolled by when it's finished >>> start for example with a photo (or video and grab the frame where >>> the panic occurs) and - disable grub options like rhgb or quit ... >> Here is a couple of pictures, > ^^ should be are.* >> http://i.imgur.com/Vqvqn1H.jpg >> http://i.imgur.com/WQaz1j9.png >> >> Any use? > I'm just guessing here, but it looks to me as though it's looking at > inodes - so filesystem, and kernel modules, maybe video - notice the > blacklist. > > Wonder if this is a grub2 issue, and it's not finding the filesystem. This > isn't, by chance, a secure boot, not BIOS, system? > > mark > > No nothing that exciting, BIOS, and xfs on lvm2. Pretty much the standard options anaconda gives you And it boots fine in 3.10.0-229.20.1.el7.x86_64