Difference between revisions of "Kernel"
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− | If you want yum to | + | If you want do not want yum to install the secure ASL kernel, and would prefer to stick with your distributions stock kernel, put 'exclude=kernel*' in the [asl-2.0] section in /etc/yum.repos.d/asl.repo. ASL will actively test and report vulnerabilities in all kernels, so if your stock kernel is reported to have vulnerabilities '''these are not false positives.''' We do not recommend you use any kernel other than the ASL kernel. |
== How to tell if you are running the ASL kernel == | == How to tell if you are running the ASL kernel == |
Revision as of 23:52, 29 December 2010
Contents |
Abstract
This is a very very basic attempt to describe how the kernel is implemeted on redhat/fedora/centos for those people whom are in environments where someone tried to be "helpful" by removing the native distros kernel and replace it with their own. This is NOT an article for VPS users, because you dont have a kernel and theres nothing you can do. As a side note, this is not a replacement for the real documentation in the linux kernel, they are just my personal observations and are subject to error. This is not linux canon. You have been warned.
Overview
The kernel installation/upgrade process is for the most part completely automated. Upgrade events are capable of reading the existing configuration information, and adding them to the boot loader.
Major components
Kernel, usually /boot/vmlinuz-XXXX
Ram Disk, usually /boot/initrd-XXXX
Modules, usually /lib/modules/XXXX
Boot loader, usually Grub (/etc/grub.conf which is a symlink to /boot/grub/menu.lst)
Module configuration information, /etc/modprobe.conf, or /etc/modprobe.d/*
Minor componets
New-kernel-pkg, /sbin/new-kernel-pkg
Kenel configuration file (used by new-kernel-pkg), /etc/sysconfig/kernel
mkinitrd config directory (depends on distro), /etc/sysconfig/mkinitrd/
Boot Process
1) Grub is configured to load a specific kernel
2) Kernel boots, this loads the initrd ramdisk
3) initrd contains the modules needed to read core hardware, like the disks. This is generally where mayhem happens.
4) System mounts disks and goes multi-user, remaining modules like the ethernet controller, lm_sensors, firewall modules, are loaded dynamically
Initial Installation Process
This is all pretty amazing and I'm completely underselling it. Basically the Red Hat OS installer does some really impressive work, its called anaconda and you can read more about it here. In brief, the system boots off of an installer kernel, and anaconda interrogates the system to populate the modprobe configuration file mentioned above. Its the only thing I know of that can actually figure out what the hardware is on a box without human intervention.
Modprobe is what loads the kernel drivers for everything on the box, like the disks or the network card, and the modprobe.conf/modprobe.d part is only configured through anaconda. If you dont go through anaconda, then you dont get these configs for your hardware, and if you dont have these configs a normal upgrade wont work.
Let me reiterate this, if you're in an environment where someone thought they were doing you a favor by not putting their own kernel on a system from a disk image (1&1, and ovh, I mean YOU), well they arent. You're about to take the first step down the long road of becoming a kernel/hardware expert. There is no automated way, short of re-imaging the box (and thereby running anaconda again) to resolve this.
Upgrade Process
Assuming you've got a healthy, normal system, its largely automated. At most I generally only interact with the system at the grub level, using tricks like --once to boot kernels in test mode. That aside, heres what happens when you upgrade the kernel with yum.
1) Yum installs an additional kernel on the system. It may be configured to remove older kernels, but in nearly every environment it is just adding kernels to the system.
2) Inside the kernel rpm there is a post processing macro called %post, this is a shell script that actually does all the magic. Heres what it looks like from Fedora 10's 2.6.27.x kernels:
%{expand:%%post %{?-v*}}\ %{-s:\ if [ `uname -i` == "x86_64" -o `uname -i` == "i386" ] &&\ [ -f /etc/sysconfig/kernel ]; then\ /bin/sed -i -e 's/^DEFAULTKERNEL=%{-s*}$/DEFAULTKERNEL=%{-r*}/' /etc/sysconfig/kernel || exit $?\ fi}\ /sbin/new-kernel-pkg --package kernel%{?-v:-%{-v*}} --mkinitrd --kernel-args="selinux=0 acpi=off" --depmod --install %{?1} %{KVERREL}%{?-v*} || exit $?\ %{nil}
3) Breaking this down, the first step is to update /etc/sysconfig/kernel. The sed line above is passing in information on which base kernel is being used. This is not the version, rather its saying that the default kernel for this system is the kernel-PAE or kernel- package. /etc/sysconfig/kernel itself is one of the config files used by the next step.
4) new-kernel-pkg is run. This is what creates the initrd ramdisk, and add the kernel to grub. Getting back to the whole modprobe.conf issue, new-kernel-pkg reads /etc/modprobe.conf or /etc/modprobe.d for the information it needs to create the /boot/initrd ramdisk. If this information is wrong, or missing, the kernel will not boot. What you'll get is a kernel panic.
5) Once the initrd is created, new-kernel-pkg adds the entries to the bootloader (/etc/grub.conf or /boot/grub/menu.lst), again using /etc/sysconfig/kernel as its config file. You'll see a setting in there UPDATEDEFAULT=yes. If this is set to yes, then whenever new-kernel-pkg is run, the system will automatically configure that kernel as the default.
6) Sometimes during this process you will see warnings that certain modules dont exist. This gets back to modprobe.conf again, as the kernel evolves sometimes the module names will change, or even go away. The entries still exist in modpobe.conf, and so new-kernel-pkg will still try to add them. Its generally a bad sign, and something you *should* worry about, especially if its referencing something important like a network or disk controller. Because of this its a good idea to always boot your kernels in testing mode with the --once flag.
Troubleshooting
Setting which kernel to boot
Linux uses a boot loader to select which kernel to boot into (this is not part of ASL). In most cases your system will use a boot loader called "grub". If your system is using lilo, the older (really really old) boot loader we recommend you use grub. If your system is using grub:
Modify this file as root:
/etc/grub.conf
A typical grub.conf file will look similar to this:
# Note that you do not have to rerun grub after making changes to this file # NOTICE: You have a /boot partition. This means that # all kernel and initrd paths are relative to /boot/, eg. # root (hd0,0) # kernel /vmlinuz-version ro root=/dev/md1 # initrd /initrd-version.img #boot=/dev/md0 default=0 timeout=5 splashimage=(hd0,0)/grub/splash.xpm.gz hiddenmenu title CentOS (2.6.27.7-9.art.i686) root (hd0,0) kernel /vmlinuz-2.6.27.7-9.art.i686 ro root=/dev/md1 rhgb quiet selinux=0 panic=5 ramdisk_size=128000 initrd /initrd-2.6.27.7-9.art.i686.img title CentOS (2.6.26.6-1.art.i686) root (hd0,0) kernel /vmlinuz-2.6.26.6-1.art.i686 ro root=/dev/md1 rhgb quiet selinux=0 panic=5 ramdisk_size=128000 initrd /initrd-2.6.26.6-1.art.i686.img title CentOS (2.6.25.4-4.art.i686) root (hd0,0) kernel /vmlinuz-2.6.25.4-4.art.i686 ro root=/dev/md1 rhgb quiet selinux=0 panic=5 ramdisk_size=128000 initrd /initrd-2.6.25.4-4.art.i686.img
The system will boot into the kernel based on the configuration of this line in /etc/grub/conf:
default=0
Where "0" is the number of the kernel to boot into. In grub the first position is "0", the second position is "1" and so on. So the kernel the system will boot into, in the example above, is:
title CentOS (2.6.27.7-9.art.i686) root (hd0,0) kernel /vmlinuz-2.6.27.7-9.art.i686 ro root=/dev/md1 rhgb quiet selinux=0 panic=5 ramdisk_size=128000 initrd /initrd-2.6.27.7-9.art.i686.img
If you want the system to boot into a different kernel, for example if we wanted to boot into the second kernel (in position 1, remember the first position is 0, not 1):
title CentOS (2.6.26.6-1.art.i686) root (hd0,0) kernel /vmlinuz-2.6.26.6-1.art.i686 ro root=/dev/md1 rhgb quiet selinux=0 panic=5 ramdisk_size=128000 initrd /initrd-2.6.26.6-1.art.i686.img
The this line:
default=0
Must be changed to:
default=1
If you want do not want yum to install the secure ASL kernel, and would prefer to stick with your distributions stock kernel, put 'exclude=kernel*' in the [asl-2.0] section in /etc/yum.repos.d/asl.repo. ASL will actively test and report vulnerabilities in all kernels, so if your stock kernel is reported to have vulnerabilities these are not false positives. We do not recommend you use any kernel other than the ASL kernel.
How to tell if you are running the ASL kernel
You can tell if you are running an ASL kernel with this command:
uname -a
You should see a kernel name with "art" in the title, for example:
Linux www3.atomicorp.com 2.6.32.21-3.art.x86_64 #1 SMP Tue Sep 7 16:57:34 EDT 2010 x86_64 x86_64 x86_64 GNU/Linux
If you do not see a kernel name with "art" in the title then you are not running the ASL kernel. If you see "art" in the title, then you are running the ASL kernel.
What to do if the kernel is not installed
If the kernel is not installed after running the ASL installer, that can mean two things:
1) If this is a VPS, you can not install a kernel. VPS systems do not have their own kernel and use the single kernel shared by the system. Please contact your hosting provider or sysadmin to install the ASL kernel on the root system.
2) if you are running Linux in a Xen client, you can not use the ASL kernel.
3) If this is not a VPS or Xen client, the ASL installer will not install the kernel if your system is configured to not allow this. No distribution does this by default. If you system is configured this way, it usually means yum is configured on your system to not allow kernels to be installed. Please check your yum configuration to make sure it is not configured to exclude kernels. Some places to check are your /etc/yum.conf file for a line similar to this:
exclude=kernel*
If you see any lines like that, remove them. Also check in your /etc/yum.repos.d directory to make sure someone did not set this in a repository.
ASL honors your systems configuration, so if you configure you system to prevent kernels from being installed via yum, ASL will not install its kernel. If you do not have any exclude lines configured for yum, please contact the parties that configured/setup your system and ask them to fix your system to allow kernels to be installed.
You can also try manually installing the kernel, but keep in mind that if you have to do this something else is wrong with your system. Please run this command as root to see if yum is listing the ASL kernels:
yum list | grep kernel
You should see kernel names similar to this (note the "art" in the rpm name, your architecture may be different, but an ASL kernel will have "art" in the name):
kernel.x86_64 1:2.6.25.4-4.art installed kernel.x86_64 1:2.6.26.6-1.art installed kernel.x86_64 1:2.6.27.7-9.art installed kernel.x86_64 1:2.6.29.6-1.art installed kernel.x86_64 1:2.6.32.8-1.art installed kernel-devel.x86_64 1:2.6.25.4-4.art installed kernel-devel.x86_64 1:2.6.26.6-1.art installed kernel-devel.x86_64 1:2.6.27.7-9.art installed kernel-devel.x86_64 1:2.6.29.6-1.art installed kernel-devel.x86_64 1:2.6.32.8-1.art installed kernel-headers.x86_64 1:2.6.32.8-1.art installed
If you see art kernels listed, yum upgrade should work, in that case you would run this command as root:
yum upgrade kernel
If this does not work, or the kernels are not listed, please open a case with support by sending an email to support@atomicorp.com.
If the kernel is not installed, and you have not run the ASL installer, run the ASL installer. The ASL installer is the only supported method of installing the ASL kernel.