Manually Upgrading the Kernel
Fedora kernels are packaged in the RPM format so that they are easy to upgrade and verify using the DNF or PackageKit package managers. PackageKit automatically queries the DNF repositories and informs you of packages with available updates, including kernel packages.
This chapter is therefore only useful for users who need to manually update a kernel package using the rpm command instead of dnf.
Use DNF to install kernels whenever possible
Whenever possible, use either the DNF or PackageKit package manager to install a new kernel because they always install a new kernel instead of replacing the current one, which could potentially leave your system unable to boot. |
For more information on installing kernel packages with DNF, see Updating Packages.
Overview of Kernel Packages
Fedora contains the following kernel packages:
-
kernel — Contains the kernel for single, multicore and multiprocessor systems.
-
kernel-debug — Contains a kernel with numerous debugging options enabled for kernel diagnosis, at the expense of reduced performance.
-
kernel-devel — Contains the kernel headers and makefiles sufficient to build modules against the kernel package.
-
kernel-debug-devel — Contains the development version of the kernel with numerous debugging options enabled for kernel diagnosis, at the expense of reduced performance.
-
kernel-headers — Includes the C header files that specify the interface between the Linux kernel and user-space libraries and programs. The header files define structures and constants that are needed for building most standard programs.
-
linux-firmware — Contains all of the firmware files that are required by various devices to operate.
-
perf — This package contains supporting scripts and documentation for the perf tool shipped in each kernel image subpackage.
-
kernel-abi-whitelists — Contains information pertaining to the Fedora kernel ABI, including a lists of kernel symbols that are needed by external Linux kernel modules and a dnf plug-in to aid enforcement.
-
kernel-tools — Contains tools for manipulating the Linux kernel and supporting documentation.
Preparing to Upgrade
Before upgrading the kernel, it is recommended that you take some precautionary steps.
First, ensure that working boot media exists for the system in case a problem occurs. If the boot loader is not configured properly to boot the new kernel, you can use this media to boot into Fedora.
USB media often comes in the form of flash devices sometimes called pen drives, thumb disks, or keys, or as an externally-connected hard disk device. Almost all media of this type is formatted as a VFAT
file system. You can create bootable USB media on media formatted as ext2
, ext3
, ext4
, or VFAT
.
You can transfer a distribution image file or a minimal boot media image file to USB media. Make sure that sufficient free space is available on the device. Around 4 GB is required for a distribution DVD image, around 700 MB for a distribution CD image, or around 10 MB for a minimal boot media image.
You must have a copy of the boot.iso
file from a Fedora installation DVD, or installation CD-ROM#1, and you need a USB storage device formatted with the VFAT
file system and around 16 MB of free space. The following procedure will not affect existing files on the USB storage device unless they have the same path names as the files that you copy onto it. To create USB boot media, perform the following commands as the root
user:
-
Install the SYSLINUX bootloader on the USB storage device:
~]# syslinux /dev/sdX1
…where sdX is the device name.
-
Create mount points for
boot.iso
and the USB storage device:~]# mkdir /mnt/isoboot /mnt/diskboot
-
Mount
boot.iso
:~]# mount -o loop boot.iso /mnt/isoboot
-
Mount the USB storage device:
~]# mount /dev/sdX1 /mnt/diskboot
-
Copy the ISOLINUX files from the
boot.iso
to the USB storage device:~]# cp /mnt/isoboot/isolinux/* /mnt/diskboot
-
Use the
isolinux.cfg
file fromboot.iso
as thesyslinux.cfg
file for the USB device:~]# grep -v local /mnt/isoboot/isolinux/isolinux.cfg > /mnt/diskboot/syslinux.cfg
-
Unmount
boot.iso
and the USB storage device:~]# umount /mnt/isoboot /mnt/diskboot
-
You should reboot the machine with the boot media and verify that you are able to boot with it before continuing.
Alternatively, on systems with a floppy drive, you can create a boot diskette by installing the mkbootdisk package and running the mkbootdisk command as root
. See man mkbootdisk man page after installing the package for usage information.
To determine which kernel packages are installed, execute the command dnf list installed "kernel-*" at a shell prompt. The output will comprise some or all of the following packages, depending on the system’s architecture, and the version numbers might differ:
~]# dnf list installed "kernel-*" Last metadata expiration check performed 0:28:51 ago on Tue May 26 21:22:39 2015. Installed Packages kernel-core.x86_64 4.0.3-300.fc22 @System kernel-core.x86_64 4.0.4-300.fc22 @System kernel-core.x86_64 4.0.4-301.fc22 @System kernel-headers.x86_64 4.0.4-301.fc22 @System kernel-modules.x86_64 4.0.3-300.fc22 @System kernel-modules.x86_64 4.0.4-300.fc22 @System kernel-modules.x86_64 4.0.4-301.fc22 @System
From the output, determine which packages need to be downloaded for the kernel upgrade. For a single processor system, the only required package is the kernel package. See Overview of Kernel Packages for descriptions of the different packages.
Downloading the Upgraded Kernel
There are several ways to determine if an updated kernel is available for the system.
-
Via Fedora Update System — Download and install the kernel RPM packages. For more information, refer to https://bodhi.fedoraproject.org/.
-
Via
DNF
using check-update:
dnf check-update --enablerepo=updates-testing
To install the kernel manually, continue to Performing the Upgrade.
Performing the Upgrade
After retrieving all of the necessary packages, it is time to upgrade the existing kernel.
Keep the old kernel when performing the upgrade
It is strongly recommended that you keep the old kernel in case there are problems with the new kernel. |
At a shell prompt, change to the directory that contains the kernel RPM packages. Use -i
argument with the rpm command to keep the old kernel. Do not use the -U
option, since it overwrites the currently installed kernel, which creates boot loader problems. For example:
~]# rpm -ivh kernel-kernel_version.arch.rpm
The next step is to verify that the initial RAM disk image has been created. See Verifying the Initial RAM Disk Image for details.
Verifying the Initial RAM Disk Image
The job of the initial RAM disk image is to preload the block device modules, such as for IDE, SCSI or RAID, so that the root file system, on which those modules normally reside, can then be accessed and mounted. On Fedora 33 systems, whenever a new kernel is installed using either the DNF, PackageKit, or RPM package manager, the Dracut utility is always called by the installation scripts to create an initramfs (initial RAM disk image).
On all architectures other than IBM eServer System i (see Verifying the Initial RAM Disk Image and Kernel on IBM eServer System i), you can create an initramfs
by running the dracut command. However, you usually don’t need to create an initramfs
manually: this step is automatically performed if the kernel and its associated packages are installed or upgraded from RPM packages distributed by The Fedora Project.
On architectures that use the GRUB 2 boot loader, you can verify that an initramfs
corresponding to your current kernel version exists and is specified correctly in the /boot/grub2/grub.cfg
configuration file by following this procedure:
-
As
root
, list the contents in the/boot/
directory and find the kernel (vmlinuz-kernel_version
) andinitramfs-kernel_version
with the latest (most recent) version number:Contoh 1. Ensuring that the kernel and initramfs versions match~]# ls /boot/ config-3.17.4-302.fc21.x86_64 config-3.17.6-300.fc21.x86_64 config-3.17.7-300.fc21.x86_64 efi elf-memtest86+-5.01 extlinux grub2 initramfs-0-rescue-db90b4e3715b42daa871351439343ca4.img initramfs-3.17.4-302.fc21.x86_64.img initramfs-3.17.6-300.fc21.x86_64.img initramfs-3.17.7-300.fc21.x86_64.img initrd-plymouth.img lost+found memtest86+-5.01 System.map-3.17.4-302.fc21.x86_64 System.map-3.17.6-300.fc21.x86_64 System.map-3.17.7-300.fc21.x86_64 vmlinuz-0-rescue-db90b4e3715b42daa871351439343ca4 vmlinuz-3.17.4-302.fc21.x86_64 vmlinuz-3.17.6-300.fc21.x86_64 vmlinuz-3.17.7-300.fc21.x86_64
-
we have three kernels installed (or, more correctly, three kernel files are present in the
/boot/
directory), -
the latest kernel is
vmlinuz-3.17.7-300.fc21.x86_64
, and -
an
initramfs
file matching our kernel version,initramfs-3.17.7-300.fc21.x86_64.img
, also exists.initrd files in the /boot/ directory are not the same as initramfs filesIn the
/boot/
directory you might find severalinitrd-kernel_versionkdump.img
files. These are special files created by thekdump
mechanism for kernel debugging purposes, are not used to boot the system, and can safely be ignored. For more information onkdump
, see the Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7 Kernel Crash Dump Guide.
-
-
(Optional) If your
initramfs-kernel_version
file does not match the version of the latest kernel in/boot
, or, in certain other situations, you might need to generate aninitramfs
file with the Dracut utility. Simply invoking dracut asroot
without options causes it to generate aninitramfs
file in the/boot/
directory for the latest kernel present in that directory:~]# dracut
You must use the
--force
option if you want dracut to overwrite an existinginitramfs
(for example, if yourinitramfs
has become corrupt). Otherwise dracut will refuse to overwrite the existinginitramfs
file:~]# dracut F: Will not override existing initramfs (/boot/initramfs-3.17.7-300.fc21.x86_64.img) without --force
You can create an initramfs in the current directory by calling dracut initramfs_name kernel_version, for example:
~]# dracut "initramfs-$(uname -r).img" $(uname -r)
If you need to specify specific kernel modules to be preloaded, add the names of those modules (minus any file name suffixes such as
.ko
) inside the parentheses of theadd_dracutmodules="module more_modules"
directive of the/etc/dracut.conf
configuration file. You can list the file contents of aninitramfs
image file created by dracut by using the lsinitrd initramfs_file command:~]# lsinitrd /boot/initramfs-3.17.7-300.fc21.x86_64.img Image: /boot/initramfs-3.17.7-300.fc21.x86_64.img: 18M ======================================================================== Version: dracut-038-31.git20141204.fc21 [output truncated]
See man dracut and man dracut.conf for more information on options and usage.
-
Examine the
/boot/grub2/grub.cfg
configuration file to ensure that aninitramfs-kernel_version.img
file exists for the kernel version you are booting. For example:~]# grep initramfs /boot/grub2/grub.cfg initrd16 /initramfs-3.17.7-300.fc21.x86_64.img initrd16 /initramfs-3.17.6-300.fc21.x86_64.img initrd16 /initramfs-3.17.4-302.fc21.x86_64.img initrd16 /initramfs-0-rescue-db90b4e3715b42daa871351439343ca4.img
See Verifying the Boot Loader for more information on how to read and update the
/boot/grub2/grub.cfg
file.
On IBM eServer System i machines, the initial RAM disk and kernel files are combined into a single file, which is created with the addRamDisk command. This step is performed automatically if the kernel and its associated packages are installed or upgraded from the RPM packages distributed by The Fedora Project; thus, it does not need to be executed manually. To verify that it was created, run the following command as root
to make sure the /boot/vmlinitrd-kernel_version
file already exists:
ls -l /boot/
The kernel_version should match the version of the kernel just installed.
Verifying the Boot Loader
When you install a kernel using rpm, the kernel package creates an entry in the boot loader configuration file for that new kernel. However, rpm does not configure the new kernel to boot as the default kernel. You must do this manually when installing a new kernel with rpm.
It is always recommended to double-check the boot loader configuration file after installing a new kernel with rpm to ensure that the configuration is correct. Otherwise, the system might not be able to boot into Fedora properly. If this happens, boot the system with the boot media created earlier and re-configure the boot loader.
In the following table, find your system’s architecture to determine the boot loader it uses, and then click on the "See" link to jump to the correct instructions for your system.
Architecture | Boot Loader | See |
---|---|---|
x86 |
GRUB 2 |
|
AMD AMD64 or Intel 64 |
GRUB 2 |
|
IBM eServer System i |
OS/400 |
|
IBM eServer System p |
YABOOT |
|
IBM System z |
z/IPL |
— |
Configuring the GRUB 2 Boot Loader
Fedora 33 is distributed with GRUB 2, which reads its configuration from the /boot/grub2/grub.cfg
file. This file is generated by the grub2-mkconfig utility based on Linux kernels located in the /boot
directory, template files located in /etc/grub.d/
, and custom settings in the /etc/default/grub
file and is automatically updated each time you install a new kernel from an RPM package. To update this configuration file manually, type the following at a shell prompt as root
:
grub2-mkconfig-o
/boot/grub2/grub.cfg
Among various code snippets and directives, the /boot/grub2/grub.cfg
configuration file contains one or more menuentry
blocks, each representing a single GRUB 2 boot menu entry. These blocks always start with the menuentry
keyword followed by a title, list of options, and opening curly bracket, and end with a closing curly bracket. Anything between the opening and closing bracket should be indented. For example, the following is a sample menuentry
block for Fedora 21 with Linux kernel 3.17.6-300.fc21.x86_64:
menuentry 'Fedora (3.17.6-300.fc21.x86_64) 21 (Twenty One)' --class fedora --class gnu-linux --class gnu --class os --unrestricted $menuentry_id_option 'gnulinux-3.17.4-301.fc21.x86_64-advanced-effee860-8d55-4e4a-995e-b4c88f9ac9f0' { load_video set gfxpayload=keep insmod gzio insmod part_msdos insmod ext2 set root='hd0,msdos1' if [ x$feature_platform_search_hint = xy ]; then search --no-floppy --fs-uuid --set=root --hint='hd0,msdos1' f19c92f4-9ead-4207-b46a-723b7a2c51c8 else search --no-floppy --fs-uuid --set=root f19c92f4-9ead-4207-b46a-723b7a2c51c8 fi linux16 /vmlinuz-3.17.6-300.fc21.x86_64 root=/dev/mapper/fedora-root ro rd.lvm.lv=fedora/swap rd.lvm.lv=fedora/root rhgb quiet LANG=en_US.UTF-8 initrd16 /initramfs-3.17.6-300.fc21.x86_64.img }
Each menuentry
block that represents an installed Linux kernel contains linux
and initrd
directives followed by the path to the kernel and the initramfs
image respectively. If a separate /boot
partition was created, the paths to the kernel and the initramfs
image are relative to /boot
. In the example above, the initrd16 /initramfs-3.17.6-300.fc21.x86_64.img
line means that the initramfs
image is actually located at /boot/initramfs-3.17.6-300.fc21.x86_64.img
when the root file system is mounted, and likewise for the kernel path.
The kernel version number as given on the linux /vmlinuz-kernel_version
line must match the version number of the initramfs
image given on the initrd /initramfs-kernel_version.img
line of each menuentry
block. For more information on how to verify the initial RAM disk image, refer to Verifying the Initial RAM Disk Image.
The initrd directive in grub.cfg refers to an initramfs image
In For information on using Dracut, refer to Verifying the Initial RAM Disk Image. |
After installing a new kernel with rpm, verify that /boot/grub2/grub.cfg
is correct and reboot the computer into the new kernel. Ensure your hardware is detected by watching the boot process output. If GRUB 2 presents an error and is unable to boot into the new kernel, it is often easiest to try to boot into an alternative or older kernel so that you can fix the problem. Alternatively, use the boot media you created earlier to boot the system.
Causing the GRUB 2 boot menu to display
If you set the |
Configuring the OS/400 Boot Loader
The /boot/vmlinitrd-kernel-version
file is installed when you upgrade the kernel. However, you must use the dd command to configure the system to boot the new kernel.
-
As
root
, issue the command cat /proc/iSeries/mf/side to determine the default side (either A, B, or C). -
As
root
, issue the following command, where kernel-version is the version of the new kernel and side is the side from the previous command:dd if=/boot/vmlinitrd-kernel-version of=/proc/iSeries/mf/side/vmlinux bs=8k
Begin testing the new kernel by rebooting the computer and watching the messages to ensure that the hardware is detected properly.
Configuring the YABOOT Boot Loader
IBM eServer System p uses YABOOT as its boot loader. YABOOT uses /etc/aboot.conf
as its configuration file. Confirm that the file contains an image
section with the same version as the kernel package just installed, and likewise for the initramfs
image:
boot=/dev/sda1 init-message=Welcome to Fedora! Hit <TAB> for boot options partition=2 timeout=30 install=/usr/lib/yaboot/yaboot delay=10 nonvram image=/vmlinuz-2.6.32-17.EL label=old read-only initrd=/initramfs-2.6.32-17.EL.img append="root=LABEL=/" image=/vmlinuz-2.6.32-19.EL label=linux read-only initrd=/initramfs-2.6.32-19.EL.img append="root=LABEL=/"
Notice that the default is not set to the new kernel. The kernel in the first image is booted by default. To change the default kernel to boot either move its image stanza so that it is the first one listed or add the directive default
and set it to the label
of the image stanza that contains the new kernel.
Begin testing the new kernel by rebooting the computer and watching the messages to ensure that the hardware is detected properly.
Want to help? Learn how to contribute to Fedora Docs ›