Slackware initrd mini HOWTO by Patrick Volkerding, volkerdi@slackware.com Fri Nov 22 21:41:51 UTC 2024 This document describes how to create and install an initrd. Also see "man mkinitrd". 1. What is an initrd? 2. Why to I need an initrd? 3. How do I build the initrd? 4. Now that I've built an initrd, how do I use it? 1. What is an initrd? Initrd stands for "initial ramdisk". An initial ramdisk is a very small Linux filesystem that is loaded into RAM and mounted as the kernel boots, and before the main root filesystem is mounted. 2. Why do I need an initrd? The usual reason to use an initrd is because you need to load kernel modules before mounting the root partition, or because you need additional userspace support for doing so (as with LVM). Modern Linux is practically expected to be using an initrd, so even in cases where it *works* to boot without one, you're probably less likely to run into bugs by using one. 3. How do I build the initrd? Just installing the kernel package will automatically run the geninitrd script to produce an initrd, so normally you won't need to build one -- it will be done for you. However, if you need to generate an initrd you can do so by just running "geninitrd" which will build an initrd for the newest kernel in /boot. You can also specify the kernel to build an initrd for on the command line, like this: geninitrd /boot/vmlinuz-6.11.7 If you need specific modules, or you'd like to use a different initrd generator than Slackware's mkinitrd, or to make other adjustments, see the /etc/default/geninitrd configuration file. You can also disable automatic initrd generation if you don't want it. 4. Now that I've built an initrd, how do I use it? Now that you've got an initrd (/boot/initrd.gz), you'll want to load it along with the kernel at boot time. If you use LILO for your boot loader you'll need to edit /etc/lilo.conf and add a line to load the initrd. Here's an example section of lilo.conf showing how this is done: # Linux bootable partition config begins image = /boot/vmlinuz-generic initrd = /boot/initrd-generic.img root = /dev/sda6 label = Slackware read-only # Linux bootable partition config ends The initrd is loaded by the "initrd = /boot/initrd-generic.img" line. Just add the line right below the line for the kernel image you use. Save the file, and then run LILO again ('lilo' at the command line). You'll need to run lilo every time you edit lilo.conf or rebuild the initrd. Other bootloaders also support the use of an initrd. See the documentation for those programs for details on using an initrd with them. --------- Have fun!