Difference between revisions of "028 to 042 kernel upgrade"

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Revision as of 21:44, 29 October 2013

This article describes a way to upgrade your old OpenVZ system with RHEL5-based (028stabNNN kernel) to RHEL6-based (042stabNNN) kernel, and convert /vz from ext3 to ext4.

Assumptions:

  • systems is CentOS (RHEL) 5.x
  • vzkernel is 028stabXXX, i.e. RHEL5-based
  • /vz uses ext3

End result should be:

  • Same CentOS 5 system
  • vzkernel is 042stabXXX
  • /vz uses ext4

Update your system

yum update

Add rhel6 kernel repos

Disable rhel5 and enable rhel6 OpenVZ kernel repository. In other words, change /etc/yum.repos.d/openvz.repo to look like this (changes required are in bold):

  [openvz-kernel-rhel6]
  name=OpenVZ RHEL6-based stable kernels
  #baseurl=http://download.openvz.org/kernel/branches/rhel6-2.6.32/current/
  mirrorlist=http://download.openvz.org/kernel/mirrors-rhel6-2.6.32
  enabled=1
  gpgcheck=1
  gpgkey=http://download.openvz.org/RPM-GPG-Key-OpenVZ
  #exclude=vzkernel-firmware
  [openvz-kernel-rhel5]
  name=OpenVZ RHEL5-based kernel
  #baseurl=http://download.openvz.org/kernel/branches/rhel5-2.6.18/current/
  mirrorlist=http://download.openvz.org/kernel/mirrors-rhel5-2.6.18
  enabled=0
  gpgcheck=1
  gpgkey=http://download.openvz.org/RPM-GPG-Key-OpenVZ


Install new OpenVZ kernel

# yum install vzkernel.x86_64

Check bootloader configuration

Make sure 042stab kernel is there and will boot by default:

  cat /boot/grub/grub.conf

  timeout 5
  default 0
  title OpenVZ (2.6.32-042stab081.8)
  root (hd0,1)
  kernel /vmlinuz-2.6.32-042stab081.8 ro root=/dev/sda3 vga=0x317 selinux=0 sysfs.deprecated=1
  initrd /initrd-2.6.32-042stab081.8.img
  
  title OpenVZ (2.6.18-348.16.1.el5.028stab108.1)
  root (hd0,1)
  kernel /vmlinuz-2.6.18-348.16.1.el5.028stab108.1 ro root=/dev/sda3 vga=0x317 selinux=0
  initrd /initrd-2.6.18-348.16.1.el5.028stab108.1.img
  ....

Reboot into new kernel

# reboot

and make sure the system is up and running.

Convert /vz to ext4

Boot node from a live-CD (such as, CentOS 6 live CD) and perform the following steps.

Check file system:

# fsck.ext3 -f /dev/sdxY

Turn on ext4 features:

# tune2fs -O extents,uninit_bg,dir_index /dev/sdxY

Check the new file system again, as ext4 this time:

# fsck.ext4 -fD /dev/sdxY

You can do the same for root filesystem, too.

Now, mount your ROOT (/, not /vz) and BOOT partitions:

# mkdir /tmp/root
# mount /dev/sdaB /tmp/root
# mount /dev/sdaC /tmp/root/boot

Finally, chroot into it:

# chroot /tmp/root

Edit its /etc/fstab, replacing ext3 with ext4 for /vz (and / if you converted it as well).

# vi /etc/fstab

Create new initrd with proper modules

This assumes you are still entered chroot:

# mkinitrd -v -f --with=ext4 --builtin=ehci-hcd --builtin=ohci-hcd --builtin=uhci-hcd \
  /boot/initrd-2.6.32-042stab81.8.img 2.6.32-042stab081.8

Notes:

  • you have to add ext4 explicitly
  • in RHEL6 kernels some USB stuff (that used to be in ehci-hcd, ohci-hcd, uhci-hcd modules) is built-in

Reboot and enjoy

End result is:

     # cat /etc/issue
     CentOS release 5.10 (Final)
     Kernel \r on an \m
     
     # uname -a 
     Linux CentOS-58-64-minimal 2.6.32-042stab081.8 #1 SMP Mon Sep 30 16:52:24 MSK 2013 x86_64 x86_64 x86_64 GNU/Linux
     # df -Th
     Filesystem    Type    Size  Used Avail Use% Mounted on
     /dev/sda3     ext4    259G  1.5G  244G   1% /
      tmpfs        tmpfs     16G     0   16G   0% /dev/shm
     /dev/sda2     ext3    496M   46M  425M  10% /boot
     /dev/sdb1     ext4    1.8T  196M  1.7T   1% /vz

See also

Acknowledgements

This article was originally written by Denis Hohryakov.