PXE Boot HP X2 210 (Hybrid tablet Windows 10 Pro)
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@Tom-Elliott I’ve just tried intel and realtek.efi,
DHCP failed...
First time (in my original post) I tried ipxe, snp and snponly.efi, and always black screen after bzimage and init.xz…
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@Tom-Elliott Hmm, but I guess Matthieu’s setup is working for other devices, right?
@Matthieu-Jacquart As you are using FOG trunk (signature), can you please try to increase kernel loglevel and enable debug. You can find those settings in FOG configuration in the web GUI. Maybe we see some more info then.
As well I really like George’s idea to boot any kind of live Linux from an USB thumb drive to see if you can get Linux up at all. -
@Sebastian-Roth I’m still under the impression it’s related to the files not having the right content, but I could be wrong. It happens a TON!
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@george1421
@Sebastian-Roth
I increase FOG_KERNEL_LOGLEVEL to 7 and activate FOG_KERNEL_DEBUG, which log can I look at after ?I can boot on ubuntu live USB, it works perfectly
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@Matthieu-Jacquart My intent was to not send you in 20 directions all at once. But since a live boot works, once you get the debugging information for the devs, it would be interesting to know what the output of
lsblk
andlspci -m
are. -
How about we get:
ls -lart /var/www/fog/service/ipxe/{bzImage{,32},init{,_32}.xz}
First.
I’m still guessing these files didn’t download properly last time.
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@Matthieu-Jacquart There is no log file. You will see more output on the screen when your tablet boots up - if so. But maybe you won’t see any more information. Can you boot other clients properly? Just asking to make sure your kernel/inits are fine.
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@Tom Elliott
ls -lart /var/www/fog/service/ipxe/{bzImage{,32},init{,_32}.xz} on fog server give meroot@FOG:~$ ls -lart /var/www/fog/service/ipxe/{bzImage{,32},init{,_32}.xz} -rw-r--r-- 1 fog www-data 16476332 janv. 21 08:22 /var/www/fog/service/ipxe/init.xz -rw-r--r-- 1 fog www-data 15448272 janv. 21 08:23 /var/www/fog/service/ipxe/init_32.xz -rw-r--r-- 1 fog www-data 6847456 janv. 21 08:23 /var/www/fog/service/ipxe/bzImage -rw-r--r-- 1 fog www-data 6759504 janv. 21 08:23 /var/www/fog/service/ipxe/bzImage32
@Sebastian-Roth Yes other client works perfectly, I deploy image yesterday and no problem. I didn’t see more output when I tried to boot on tablet
@george1421 Ok I’ll give you the result of command on Monday, for now I’m at home
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At least now I know it’s not bad downloaded files and what not.
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@george1421 said:
@Matthieu-Jacquart My intent was to not send you in 20 directions all at once. But since a live boot works, once you get the debugging information for the devs, it would be interesting to know what the output of
lsblk
andlspci -m
are.I’ll reiterate this. This is easy to get and important to know.
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@Matthieu-Jacquart Hope we’re not asking too many things here from you. But would it be possible to take a short video of the whole bootup process. Sometimes there are small hints that we only see if we have it right in front of our eyes…
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@george1421 said:
… it would be interesting to know what the output of
lsblk
andlspci -m
are.Thinking about this a bit more, it would also be interesting to know what modules are loaded by what kernel modules were loaded by the live boot OS. You would use
lsmod
and probably direct the output into a file. -
Ok guys, I’ll give you this on monday
I hop to find a solution, It seems so close to boot properly on fog server ! -
@Tom-Elliott @Wayne-Workman @george1421 @Sebastian-Roth
OK, let’s go : Video link (really sorry for quality !!!) : https://youtu.be/ob_5qC7KRqs
For test with (Ubuntu 14.04 LTS Live) : something strange, in file explorer ubuntu just see it’s own file system and USB key, but not internal HDD (windows 10 partitions). If I use live USB key on another computer with SSD, Ubuntu displays Windows partitions (Windows 7)
ubuntu@ubuntu:~$ lsblk NAME MAJ:MIN RM SIZE RO TYPE MOUNTPOINT sda 8:0 1 7.4G 0 disk └─sda1 8:1 1 7.4G 0 part /cdrom sdb 8:16 1 7.4G 0 disk └─sdb1 8:17 1 7.4G 0 part /media/ubuntu/54BF-F230 loop0 7:0 0 962.1M 1 loop /rofs mmcblk0rpmb 179:24 0 4M 0 disk mmcblk0boot0 179:8 0 4M 1 disk mmcblk0boot1 179:16 0 4M 1 disk mmcblk0 179:0 0 58.2G 0 disk ├─mmcblk0p1 179:1 0 260M 0 part ├─mmcblk0p2 179:2 0 128M 0 part ├─mmcblk0p3 179:3 0 57.1G 0 part └─mmcblk0p4 179:4 0 746M 0 part
ubuntu@ubuntu:~$ lspci -m 00:00.0 "Host bridge" "Intel Corporation" "Device 2280" -r22 "Hewlett-Packard Company" "Device 8173" 00:02.0 "VGA compatible controller" "Intel Corporation" "Device 22b0" -r22 "Hewlett-Packard Company" "Device 8173" 00:03.0 "Multimedia controller" "Intel Corporation" "Device 22b8" -r22 "Hewlett-Packard Company" "Device 8173" 00:0a.0 "Non-VGA unclassified device" "Intel Corporation" "Device 22d8" -r22 "Hewlett-Packard Company" "Device 8173" 00:0b.0 "Signal processing controller" "Intel Corporation" "Device 22dc" -r22 "Unknown vendor 7270" "Device 8086" 00:14.0 "USB controller" "Intel Corporation" "Device 22b5" -r22 -p30 "Hewlett-Packard Company" "Device 8173" 00:1a.0 "Encryption controller" "Intel Corporation" "Device 2298" -r22 "Hewlett-Packard Company" "Device 8173" 00:1c.0 "PCI bridge" "Intel Corporation" "Device 22c8" -r22 "" "" 00:1f.0 "ISA bridge" "Intel Corporation" "Device 229c" -r22 "Hewlett-Packard Company" "Device 8173" 01:00.0 "Network controller" "Intel Corporation" "Device 3165" -r81 "Intel Corporation" "Device 4010"
ubuntu@ubuntu:~$ lsmod Module Size Used by dm_crypt 24576 0 intel_rapl 20480 0 intel_powerclamp 20480 0 coretemp 16384 0 hp_wmi 16384 0 sparse_keymap 16384 1 hp_wmi kvm 479232 0 crct10dif_pclmul 16384 0 crc32_pclmul 16384 0 ghash_clmulni_intel 16384 0 aesni_intel 172032 0 aes_x86_64 20480 1 aesni_intel lrw 16384 1 aesni_intel gf128mul 16384 1 lrw glue_helper 16384 1 aesni_intel ablk_helper 16384 1 aesni_intel cryptd 20480 3 ghash_clmulni_intel,aesni_intel,ablk_helper iwlwifi 188416 0 joydev 20480 0 cfg80211 524288 1 iwlwifi snd_intel_sst_acpi 16384 0 snd_soc_rt5670 106496 0 dm_multipath 24576 0 snd_intel_sst_core 73728 1 snd_intel_sst_acpi snd_soc_rt5640 94208 0 snd_soc_sst_mfld_platform 77824 1 snd_intel_sst_core snd_soc_rl6231 16384 2 snd_soc_rt5640,snd_soc_rt5670 scsi_dh 16384 1 dm_multipath snd_soc_core 196608 3 snd_soc_rt5640,snd_soc_rt5670,snd_soc_sst_mfld_platform lpc_ich 24576 0 snd_compress 20480 1 snd_soc_core snd_pcm_dmaengine 16384 1 snd_soc_core i915_bpo 1130496 3 btusb 40960 0 i2c_hid 20480 0 snd_pcm 106496 5 snd_soc_rt5640,snd_soc_rt5670,snd_soc_core,snd_soc_sst_mfld_platform,snd_pcm_dmaengine snd_seq_midi 16384 0 snd_seq_midi_event 16384 1 snd_seq_midi mei_txe 20480 0 mei 90112 1 mei_txe snd_rawmidi 32768 1 snd_seq_midi shpchp 40960 0 snd_seq 65536 2 snd_seq_midi_event,snd_seq_midi snd_seq_device 16384 3 snd_seq,snd_rawmidi,snd_seq_midi snd_timer 32768 2 snd_pcm,snd_seq intel_ips 20480 1 i915_bpo drm_kms_helper 126976 1 i915_bpo snd 86016 8 snd_soc_core,snd_timer,snd_pcm,snd_seq,snd_rawmidi,snd_soc_sst_mfld_platform,snd_seq_device,snd_compress drm 344064 5 i915_bpo,drm_kms_helper dw_dmac 16384 0 8250_fintek 16384 0 soc_button_array 16384 0 pwm_lpss_platform 16384 0 soundcore 16384 1 snd dw_dmac_core 24576 1 dw_dmac i2c_designware_platform 16384 0 int3400_thermal 16384 0 rfkill_gpio 16384 0 bnep 20480 2 i2c_algo_bit 16384 1 i915_bpo rfcomm 69632 8 spi_pxa2xx_platform 24576 0 pwm_lpss 16384 1 pwm_lpss_platform i2c_designware_core 16384 1 i2c_designware_platform 8250_dw 16384 0 int3403_thermal 16384 0 acpi_thermal_rel 16384 1 int3400_thermal processor_thermal_device 16384 0 iosf_mbi 16384 1 intel_rapl bluetooth 491520 22 bnep,btusb,rfcomm parport_pc 32768 0 mac_hid 16384 0 pinctrl_cherryview 32768 2 acpi_pad 20480 0 ppdev 20480 0 lp 20480 0 parport 45056 3 lp,ppdev,parport_pc squashfs 49152 1 overlay 45056 1 nls_iso8859_1 16384 2 dm_mirror 24576 0 dm_region_hash 24576 1 dm_mirror dm_log 20480 2 dm_region_hash,dm_mirror uas 24576 0 usb_storage 69632 3 uas hid_generic 16384 0 usbhid 53248 0 hid 110592 3 i2c_hid,hid_generic,usbhid mmc_block 36864 0 video 20480 1 i915_bpo wmi 20480 1 hp_wmi sdhci_acpi 16384 0 sdhci 45056 1 sdhci_acpi
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While I’m not sure what this means at this moment, this disk structure does look interesting. Unless I’m reading this wrong (likely) it appears you have 2 or 3 hard drives in this device.
mmcblk0rpmb 179:24 0 4M 0 disk mmcblk0boot0 179:8 0 4M 1 disk mmcblk0boot1 179:16 0 4M 1 disk mmcblk0 179:0 0 58.2G 0 disk ├─mmcblk0p1 179:1 0 260M 0 part ├─mmcblk0p2 179:2 0 128M 0 part ├─mmcblk0p3 179:3 0 57.1G 0 part └─mmcblk0p4 179:4 0 746M 0 part
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mmcblk0 seems to be internal SSD with the different Windows 10 partitions, and sda1 / sdb1 were 2 USB keys
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Where I’m confused is this.
I understand that mmcblk0 is a physical disk and it has 4 partitions. I’m good with that. But the concern (in my mind) is what is mmcblk0rpmb, mmcblk0boot0, mmcblk0boot1 which also appear to be disks and how will fog deal with them. I might suspect that mmcblk0rpmb is the firmware of this device, and then there are two disks for the boot code, maybe a primary and a backup (??) But that is only a guess.
The question would be will this confuse the fog boot kernel? I guess we will need the fog devs to answer on that one.
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@george1421 mmcblk0rpmb is not used at all -> kernels that we have published actually prevent this disk from being seen. The only other part that may be a bit “weird” is the boot0/boot1 disks, but those aren’t even read in in the case of resizable images.
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@Tom-Elliott From what it sounds like something is not allowing the fog client OS to boot. One thought was that it couldn’t enumerate the disks or something similar, but that is only a very uneducated guess.
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@george1421 I understand, I was just giving information pertinent to your prior posting.
Though I will have to add, mmc disks are actually working, so if it’s stuck on the disk it would be a bit odd. From the sounds of it, it’s either stuck (meaning maybe just taking longer to load – I’m guessing you’ve waited more the 2-5 minutes with the same results?), or impatience.