It will most certainly not work as a module if all your partitions are reiserfs. It needs to be able to read the filesystem the modules are located on, and thus the kernel must have one fs built in, which should be your root partition (and where your modules should be). Of course, there are always exceptions out there, but as a general rule, thats how it works. As for why you can boot with an all reiserfs, I had the same trouble in 2.4.11+. I have not been able to get a single build on my system to boot. So here I sit at 2.4.9 and am pretty happy thus far. I have heard a few other strange things with the newer kernels anyway. A little off topic, but has anyone noticed the absence of a development branch in the kernel? As a result, it seems more bugs have poped up. Jay On Monday 19 November 2001 09:14 pm, you wrote: > I'm trying to upgrade from Mandrake default 2.4.8 kernel to 2.4.13. All of > my partitions are Reiserfs and mounted with the notails option. It works > great with the default kernel, but when I boot with my new kernel, I get a > kernel panic because it cannot find the root fs. > > I've tried compiling reiserfs support into the kernel, and also tried it as > a module with an initrd image created with the --preload reiserfs option. > I've also tried converting /boot to ext2 and that doesn't work either. > > Does anyone have a clue why this would be happening? > > Jay > _______________________________________________ > Twin Cities Linux Users Group Mailing List - Minneapolis/St. Paul, > Minnesota http://www.mn-linux.org > tclug-list at mn-linux.org > https://mailman.mn-linux.org/mailman/listinfo/tclug-list -- Jay Kline list at slushpupie.com http://www.slushpupie.com -- question = ( to ) ? be : ! be; -- Wm. Shakespeare