On Tue, Dec 29, 2015 at 2:43 PM, <m.roth at 5-cent.us> wrote: > m.roth at 5-cent.us wrote: >> >> Well, I get back from vacation, and three CentOS 7 boxes didn't come up >> this morning (my manager and the other admin did the update & reboot). >> On these three - but *not* another one or two, and I don't think those >> others are Dells, they're supermicro's - the 327 kernel fell into the >> rdosshell, I guess. I finally got one the three up by going back to the >> 228.14 kernel. >> >> Now, after googling and finding the CentOS bugzilla, 0009860, that >> referenced the upstream bugzilla, I applied the workaround discussed in >> it, Adding initcall_blacklist=clocksource_done_booting to >> GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX in /etc/default/grub and then grub2-mkconfig -o >> /etc/grub2.cfg" You're writing the grub.cfg to the wrong location with the wrong name. It needs to go to /boot/grub2/grub.cfg - that's where the bootloader looks for it. grubby looks for /etc/grub2.cfg which is a symlink to /boot/grub2/grub.cfg, because grubby. >> >> On one. On the other, that's got a *large* RAID appliance (a JetStor w/ >> 42 4TB drives...), it seemed to work... then gave me a dozen or so >> ERROR: unsupported sector size 4096 on /dev/sdd. >> ERROR: unsupported sector size 4096 on /dev/sde. >> >> 0. Did the grub2-mkconfig actually work correctly? >> 1. Is it safe to ignore the errors and reboot? >> 2. This seems to be an old bug in os-prober, that was fixed >> years ago - has it slipped back in? I'm willing to guess that something now causes this RAID device to report a logical sector size of 4096 bytes, rather than 512 bytes as is ordinarily the case for real hard drives, most of which are now 512e AF drives. It is true that 4096 byte logical sectors aren't supported by bootloaders on BIOS systems; in theory it could be supported on UEFI systems. > There's still the question of why os-probe, which was supposedly fixed > almost five years ago, according to what I google, is back to complaining > at 4k sectors. I suggest added to /etc/default/grub GRUB_DISABLE_OS_PROBER="true" Since you only care about the current system being added to the boot menu, searching for other OS's is irrelevant anyway. -- Chris Murphy