Am Wed, 03 Nov 2010 20:57:35 -0500 schrieb "David C. Rankin" <drankinatty@suddenlinkmail.com>:
I think that is exactly the understanding I got from Thomas, and it makes an uncanny amount of sense. Though it doesn't have a 100% correlation, it does explain why just about ever-other kernel has exhibited this problem.
I'll do a test. Right now I have 2.6.35-7 installed. I have upgraded to 2.6.35-8 (wouldn't boot), downgraded to 2.6.35-7 (worked), upgraded to 2.6.36-3 (wouldn't boot).
So if this theory is correct, I should be able to start with 2.6.35-7 (working), upgrade to 2.6.35-8 (expect failure), then upgrade directly to 2.6.36-3 and (expect success) -- even though a direct update from 2.6.35-7 to 2.6.36-3 originally resulted in failure.
If this works I'll....
I guess there has been something changed in the kernel26 2.6.35.8 and above which doesn't work with your BIOS or your RAID. Either this is a bug in kernel26 2.6.35.8 and newer or it is not a bug but a new feature or a change which doesn't work with your probably outdated BIOS. I'd suggest asking kernel upstream by either filing a bug report at kernel.org or asking on their mailing list. It definitely must have something to do with the kernel. Otherwise it wouldn't work again after a kernel downgrade. Heiko