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    Strange issue with booting XCP-NG

    Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved Compute
    85 Posts 9 Posters 33.4k Views 2 Watching
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    • R Offline
      r1 XCP-ng Team @Guest
      last edited by

      @appollonius I don't think there is any harm. You will be either be able to boot or not. You can always switch back to old settings.

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      • ? Offline
        A Former User @r1
        last edited by

        @r1 Alright then I will give it a try somewhere today 🙂

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        • stormiS Offline
          stormi Vates 🪐 XCP-ng Team
          last edited by

          Unless I'm mistaken, XCP-ng installed in UEFI mode won't boot in bios mode. There won't be anything written in the MBR.

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          • ? Offline
            A Former User @stormi
            last edited by

            @stormi Ahh... So I would have to reinstall XCP-NG completely to be able to boot in BIOS?

            stormiS 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
            • stormiS Offline
              stormi Vates 🪐 XCP-ng Team @Guest
              last edited by

              @appollonius yes

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              • ? Offline
                A Former User @stormi
                last edited by

                @stormi Damn... And that all to 'test' if the GPU is working in BIOS mode.

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                • ? Offline
                  A Former User
                  last edited by

                  Maybe I asked the wrong question here, but is the NVIDIA QUADRO P400 even supported? Maybe that could be an issue as well? If not I think I'll have to grab something like a Radeon WX2100..

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                  • stormiS Offline
                    stormi Vates 🪐 XCP-ng Team
                    last edited by

                    It's not supported for vGPUs https://xcp-ng.org/docs/compute.html#vgpu but it should not prevent other uses of XCP-ng in theory.

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                    • ? Offline
                      A Former User @stormi
                      last edited by A Former User

                      @stormi Ahh thanks for the webpage, though I still think BIOS mode wont fix this issue I believe.. So I will capture the serial output, to see what happens.

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                      • stormiS Offline
                        stormi Vates 🪐 XCP-ng Team
                        last edited by stormi

                        As I said (or tried to say), vGPU support has nothing to do with the ability to display the host console on screen.

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                        • stormiS Offline
                          stormi Vates 🪐 XCP-ng Team
                          last edited by

                          So BIOS mode might help, but there's no guarantee.

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                          • ? Offline
                            A Former User @stormi
                            last edited by

                            @stormi I wanna try this first so I can see what is going wrong in UEFI mode. So I can pass it on to you guys, so you might be able to fix this issue in UEFI mode. Because there might be other people running into this issue as well 🙂

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                            • ? Offline
                              A Former User
                              last edited by

                              @r1 @stormi I digged alot today, I even exchanged the xen.gz with the possible fix that was mentioned above, where I discovered that it made my XCP-NG useless XD. Well I fixed it so I am back to normal now (hahaha). I read some more about this issue, but it could also be 'Grub' related. I have a source here: https://askubuntu.com/questions/825687/what-could-prevent-an-ubuntu-server-from-booting-without-a-vga-connected-monitor

                              And then specifically 'nomodeset' I haven't tested it yet because the grub.cfg is different from the default grub.cfg and I don't want to break things again..., but could that be a possible solution to this?

                              I have pasted the grub.cfg here, where could I put the 'nomodeset' option?

                              serial --unit=0 --speed=115200
                              terminal_input serial console
                              terminal_output serial console
                              set default=0
                              set timeout=5
                              if [ -s $prefix/grubenv ]; then
                                      load_env
                              fi
                              
                              if [ -n "$override_entry" ]; then
                                      set default=$override_entry
                              fi
                              
                              menuentry 'XCP-ng' {
                                      search --label --set root root-cybuwv
                                      multiboot2 /boot/xen.gz dom0_mem=4304M,max:4304M watchdog ucode=scan dom0_max_vcpus=1-16 crashkernel=256M,below=4G,console=vga vga=mode-0x0311 
                                      module2 /boot/vmlinuz-4.19-xen root=LABEL=root-cybuwv ro nolvm hpet=disable console=hvc0 console=tty0 quiet vga=785 splash plymouth.ignore-serial-consoles xen.pciback.hide=(0000:07:00.0)
                                      module2 /boot/initrd-4.19-xen.img
                              }
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                              • R Offline
                                r1 XCP-ng Team @Guest
                                last edited by

                                @appollonius You can set nomodeset option at the end of line which starts with module2 /boot/vmlinuz-4.19-xen.

                                With other user it did no make any difference.

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                                • ? Offline
                                  A Former User @r1
                                  last edited by

                                  @r1 Didn't work for me either.... Well I think this is then to stop the troubleshooting as I have no idea where the problem lies and we tried everything. When the monitor has been connected XCP-NG actually sees the GPU so I think it has something to do with the System parameters in UEFI or GRUB. But time will tell if someone else finds a potential solution to this...

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                                  • ? Offline
                                    A Former User
                                    last edited by

                                    Well I just had some time to reinstall xcp-ng in LEGACY BIOS MODE but unfortunately this didnt solve anything and the problem persists...

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                                    • ? Offline
                                      A Former User
                                      last edited by

                                      Alright well I lost all the data on one drive, by doing this 'joke' of reinstalling it in BIOS mode. So I thought I let VMware ESXi give it a try, well it works at VMware Apparently...

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                                      • chrisarzuC Offline
                                        chrisarzu @olivierlambert
                                        last edited by

                                        @olivierlambert I'm running xcp-ng 8.2.0, everything works fine, but when NTP is enabled it stays stuck for 40 seconds at the EFI_MEMMAP is not enabled line.
                                        If I disable NTP it boots immediately without any issues. But as soon as I enable NTP same issue happens again.
                                        I'm able to reach both the NTP servers time.cloudflare.com and time.google.com, I tested it from Network and Management Interface - Test Network - Ping custom address.
                                        After I installed xcp-ng I SSHd as root and ran yum update, so it installed all of the updates.
                                        Do you have any suggestions?

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                                        • stormiS Offline
                                          stormi Vates 🪐 XCP-ng Team
                                          last edited by

                                          It probably means that the chrony service can't join the NTP server for 40s. Network slow to initialize?

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                                          • chrisarzuC Offline
                                            chrisarzu
                                            last edited by chrisarzu

                                            @stormi this is interesting....
                                            To test if the network is slow to initialize, with NTP disabled I ran a ping to see how quickly it starts replying to ICMP after it reboots, I'm pinging to it's FQDN "xcp-ng-node1..." instead of it's IP, and it does start replying as soon as you can see the xsconsole screen (I have a monitor attached, for now). After you hit f8 it takes 47 seconds to boot back up and start replying to ICMP.
                                            When I run the same test with NTP enabled, surprisingly the host starts replying exactly 47 seconds after, but on the monitor it stays stuck at the EFI_MEMMAP screen for 40 seconds, so, in total, it takes 86 seconds to show the xconsole screen (on the attached monitor).
                                            With NTP enabled, as soon as the host started replying to ICMP I was able to SSH into it and ran a ping to time.cloudflare.com, while in the background the monitor was stuck on EFI_MEMMAP.
                                            This does NOT represent an issue in my case because my server will be headless.
                                            So I think I'm good, don't have any VMs running yet, but will check if it makes a difference for those to start up with NTP enabled and disabled.

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