Hi On 2015-07-31, Stefan Lippers-Hollmann wrote: > On 2015-07-25, Bastian Blank wrote: > > output (udev.log-priority=8 at the kernel command line) from a failed > > boot. [...] > Loading, please wait... > invalid udev.log[ 2.343952] random: systemd-udevd urandom read with 4 bits > of entropy available > -priority ignored: 8 [...]
Well, obviously (or rather not quite that obviously), the maximum log level is 7. systemd-223/src/libudev/libudev-util.c: int util_log_priority(const char *priority) { [...] if (prio >= 0 && prio <= 7) return prio; else return -ERANGE; [...] } However it seems to be even harder to reproduce with udev.log-priority=7 set. While it triggers in roughly 85% of all reboots on this system without serial console and special logging parameters, it takes quite a few reboots to reproduce with serial console and udev.log-priority=7. The attached bootlog (serial console && udev.log-priority=7) has unfortunately not been recorded with an official Debian kernel, but I've been able to reproduce it with 4.0.0-2-amd64 as well. Just that I missed increasing the scrollback buffer in time and wasn't able to fetch a full bootlog then - and, regardless of the kernel in use, reproducing takes quite many reboots (too many for now) with full logging enabled. Regards Stefan Lippers-Hollmann
boot.log.gz
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pgp8ub8TfHObx.pgp
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