Linux Kernel Booting Parameters are passed to the kernel when the machine is booting. We can pass parameters to control disks, graphics cards, and serial consoles.
Table of Contents
Linux Kernel accepts parameters being passed to the kernel when the machine is booting. We can pass parameters to control disks, graphics cards, serial consoles, networking details, and many other input/output options.
Kernel Booting Parameters
Boot parameters can be configured on the GRUB menu or on /boot/grub/grub.cfg , these parameters are used to control and optimize peripherals functions on boot.
The kernel can auto-detect information about the most common peripherals.
Boot Console Parameters
The Famous RDEV utility
The rdev command can configure:
- root file system device
- swap device
- RAM disk
- video mode
- root device permissions (readonly / readwrite)
Kernel Root FileSystem boot options
- root=a
- rootflags=
- rootfstype=
- ro
- rw
- nfsroot=
- ip=
Kernel RAM Disk boot options
- ramdisk_start=
- load_ramdisk=
- prompt_ramdisk=
- ramdisk_size=
- ramdisk_blocksize=
- ramdisk=
- noinitrd
Kernel PCI BUS boot options
Kernel Video boot options
https://www.kernel.org/doc/html/v4.14/admin-guide/kernel-parameters.html