On Mon, Mar 03, 2025 at 03:58:30PM +0100, Eric wrote:
Hi Niklas
Le 03/03/2025 à 07:25, Niklas Cassel a écrit :
So far, this just sounds like a bug where UEFI cannot detect your SSD.
Bit it is detected during cold boot, though.
UEFI problems should be reported to your BIOS vendor.
I'll try to see what can be done, however I am not sure how responsive they will be for this board...
It would be interesting to see if _Linux_ can detect your SSD, after a reboot, without UEFI involvement.
If you kexec into the same kernel as you are currently running: https://manpages.debian.org/testing/kexec-tools/kexec.8.en.html
Do you see your SSD in the kexec'd kernel?
Sorry, I've tried that using several methods (systemctl kexec / kexec --load
- kexec -e / kexec --load + shutdown --reboot now) and it failed each time.
I *don't* think it is related to this bug, however, because each time the process got stuck just after displaying "kexec_core: Starting new kernel".
I just tired (as root): # kexec -l /boot/vmlinuz-6.13.5-200.fc41.x86_64 --initrd=/boot/initramfs-6.13.5-200.fc41.x86_64.img --reuse-cmd # kexec -e
and FWIW, kexec worked fine.
Did you specify an initrd ? did you specify --reuse-cmd ?
If not, please try it.
It would be interesting to see if Linux can detect your SATA drive after a kexec. If it can't, then we need to report the issue to your drive vendor (Samsung).
Kind regards, Niklas