I think you can get the scrolling boot messages by
pressing Esc when the rotating boot icon shows up.
Unable to boot CentOS 7.x since kernel 3.10.0-1160.36.2.el7.x86_64
Re: Unable to boot CentOS 7.x since kernel 3.10.0-1160.36.2.el7.x86_64
Thanks for your suggestions.
I tried removing the quiet option, all I saw afrer that was 'Probing EDD (edd=off to disable)'
Not sure if that has anything to do with my laptop not being able to boot on newer kernels.
I will try setting the pcie_aspm=off and see if that will make the laptop crash less frequently
Yours sincerely
Ib
I tried removing the quiet option, all I saw afrer that was 'Probing EDD (edd=off to disable)'
Not sure if that has anything to do with my laptop not being able to boot on newer kernels.
I will try setting the pcie_aspm=off and see if that will make the laptop crash less frequently
Yours sincerely
Ib
Re: Unable to boot CentOS 7.x since kernel 3.10.0-1160.36.2.el7.x86_64
Thanks for all your suggestions.
I have tried all, but the laptop still crashes, even when I disable the power management in the BIOS
My original issue with kernel not booting is still an issue.
So I guess that the next step is a re-install or a new laptop
Youts sincerely
Ib Højme
I have tried all, but the laptop still crashes, even when I disable the power management in the BIOS
My original issue with kernel not booting is still an issue.
So I guess that the next step is a re-install or a new laptop
Youts sincerely
Ib Højme
Re: Unable to boot CentOS 7.x since kernel 3.10.0-1160.36.2.el7.x86_64
Can you do a CTRL-ALT-F2 and get a command prompt?
On some systems I manage, I get the same symptoms when doing a kernel update.
When your symptoms occur, I rerun the video driver install from the command prompt, and reboot, then it successfully comes back up again in X windows. (this is using an NVIDIA video card - on other cards your mileage might vary)
(edit) it would be good to confirm if the system is actually crashing, or if X windows is just failing to come up. If you can get into the system remotely using ssh, then it's not actually the OS crashing - it means X windows is failing to start.
On some systems I manage, I get the same symptoms when doing a kernel update.
When your symptoms occur, I rerun the video driver install from the command prompt, and reboot, then it successfully comes back up again in X windows. (this is using an NVIDIA video card - on other cards your mileage might vary)
(edit) it would be good to confirm if the system is actually crashing, or if X windows is just failing to come up. If you can get into the system remotely using ssh, then it's not actually the OS crashing - it means X windows is failing to start.