On Mon 2018-11-19 13:48:03, Theodore Y. Ts'o wrote: > On Mon, Nov 19, 2018 at 08:51:17PM +0530, AIAMUZZ wrote: > > Hi, > > > > I have this nagging and frustrating boot freeze i often face on my > > Deepin OS boot ... Deepin OS i think uses 'journalctl' to record logs > > on its system. > > > > 'journalctl' however seems to record boot logs ONLY for successful > > boots ... boot logs for instances of boot freezes/hangs that are > > issued with a ... 'Ctrl+Alt+Del' ... key combination or the ... Magic > > Sysrq 'b' ... key combination to get out of the frozen/hung machine > > state are just not aved in the 'journalctl' log ... > > > > Is there any option using Magic Sysrq that will enable me to record > > the failed/frozen/hung boot information to a file for troubleshooting > > before i reboot the system using the option 'b' ? > > > > If not ... Isn't it a good idea to have such an option added to Magic > > Sysrq options, that can save/record the boot/system logs upto that > > point, until just before we restart the machines ? > > This is a hard problem to solve, because there's no place to store the > information, at least not in the general case. The problem is on an > unsuccessful boot, the root file system may not have been mounted yet. > Heck, the storage devices might not have been probed at all! > > If your hardware has a place to store dmesg output across reboots (via > one of the CONFIG_PSTORE_* kernel configuration options) then this > would be an easy problem --- in fact, it would be the default even > with out needing a magic sysrq to request it. The problem is that > most x86 devices do not have hardware capable of supporting > CONFIG_PSTORE. If you have a custom BIOS which doesn't clear memory > across a warm reset, that would make things easy. Unless, unless you > are a big cloud company using custom hardware and/or a custom BIOS, > life is much more difficult. :-( > > One alternative solution you can use is to simply use a serial > console, and have a another computer monitoring the output from the > serial console. This will allow you to see all of the kernel Serial ports are not very common these days :-(. Ethernets are, and we have netconsole, maybe that can be used? (Actually, I wish we had sysrq key "configure netconsole up and re-send the dmesg buffer". Could be enabled all the time, and would eliminate frustration of looking at blinking capslock LED and thinking "I wish I knew what is in the buffer at the moment"....) Pavel -- (english) http://www.livejournal.com/~pavelmachek (cesky, pictures) http://atrey.karlin.mff.cuni.cz/~pavel/picture/horses/blog.html