David Pottage Posted December 2, 2023 Posted December 2, 2023 (edited) Armbianmonitor: https://paste.armbian.com/imelutaniv I have recently accepted the 23.11.1 armbain kernel release on my RockPro 64 The update has not rebuilt or updated the uIntrd for the 6.1.63 kernel. Note that the /boot/uInitrd symlink still points to the old uInitrd version but the other two symlinks have updated. root@jupiter:~# ls -l /boot/dtb /boot/Image /boot/uInitrd lrwxrwxrwx 1 root root 29 Dec 2 20:38 /boot/dtb -> dtb-6.1.63-current-rockchip64 lrwxrwxrwx 1 root root 33 Dec 2 20:38 /boot/Image -> vmlinuz-6.1.63-current-rockchip64 lrwxrwxrwx 1 root root 33 Nov 30 18:04 /boot/uInitrd -> uInitrd-6.1.50-current-rockchip64 root@jupiter:~# ls -l /boot/uInitrd* lrwxrwxrwx 1 root root 33 Nov 30 18:04 /boot/uInitrd -> uInitrd-6.1.50-current-rockchip64 -rw-r--r-- 1 root root 17777215 Jul 22 21:07 /boot/uInitrd-5.15.93-rockchip64 -rw-r--r-- 1 root root 17560966 Nov 30 12:06 /boot/uInitrd-6.1.50-current-rockchip64 The first time after the update I did not notice before rebooting, and the box failed to boot properly. I got to a rescue console and was able to restore the three 6.1.50 kernel files from a backup, and restore the symlinks. I tried running: apt reinstall armbian-config armbian-firmware linux-dtb-current-rockchip64 linux-image-current-rockchip64 linux-u-boot-rockpro64-current base-files But this did not fix the problem. Google is not helping me find the command to create the 6.1.63 uInitrd file by hand. I have also tried installing the 6.1.64 kernel from beta.armbian.com but that had the same issue. Currently my device is running 6.1.50-current-rockchip64 but the 6.1.64-current-rockchip64 kernel is installed and I suspect that there are inconsistencies in how things are setup. For example wireguard is not working correctly. How can I restore my device back to a stable working state? Edited December 3, 2023 by David Pottage 0 Quote
David Pottage Posted December 2, 2023 Author Posted December 2, 2023 NB: armbianmonitor did not work. No such package, and nothing that I can find to install. 0 Quote
Werner Posted December 3, 2023 Posted December 3, 2023 armbianmonitor is shipped with all images by default. There is no dedicated package for it. https://github.com/armbian/build/blob/main/packages/bsp/common/usr/bin/armbianmonitor 0 Quote
David Pottage Posted December 3, 2023 Author Posted December 3, 2023 Thanks @Werner - I have found a copy of the armbianmonitor script and used it to upload diagnostics. 0 Quote
David Pottage Posted December 4, 2023 Author Posted December 4, 2023 I was able to restore my system to a working state, by downgrading to the old kernel versions. I think that there is probably a bug or missing command in the postinst scripts for newer armbain kernels. For anyone landing here via an internet search in future, the steps where: Find the upgrade command that installed the bad kernel. zless /var/log/apt/history.log.1.gz eg: Upgrade: armbian-config:arm64 (23.8.3, 23.11.1), linux-u-boot-rockpro64-current:arm64 (23.8.1, 23.11.1), linux-dtb-current-rockchip64:arm64 (23.8.1, 23.11.1), linux-image-current-rockchip64:arm64 (23.8.1, 23.11.1), armbian-firmware:arm64 (23.8.3, 23.11.1) Note that it shows both the old and new versions. Removed the beta apt source nano apt/sources.list.d/armbian.list Used apt to downgrade the offending packages using <name>=<version> syntax eg: apt install armbian-config=23.8.3 linux-u-boot-rockpro64-current=23.8.1 linux-dtb-current-rockchip64=23.8.1 linux-image-current-rockchip64=23.8.1 armbian-firmware=23.8.3 Checked that symlinks in /boot are consistent. ls -l /boot/ In my case dtb, Image and uInitrd all pointed to 6.1.50 versions Crossed fingers, rebooted. The other thing that made it possible to resolve this was a serial console adaptor. Without one it would have been very much harder to find the problem in the first place. 0 Quote
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.