Charles Duffy wrote:
That usage looks exactly right; the kexec load command done has
prepared
the new kernel and initrd, and when 'kexec -e' is run the new kernel
will be booted.
Breaking this down into two stages allows modules associated with
non-kexec-friendly hardware to be unloaded, even if those modules are
things like network hardware which are necessary for the koan operation
to complete.
Excellent, so it's just a matter of koan not invoking it automatically,
and giving interactive users a chance to review the output. This is
goodness.
And yes, this means I haven't tested this yet myself :)
Thanks!
--Michael