If the system uses the ext3 file system, a SCSI controller, or
uses labels to reference partitions in /etc/fstab, an initial RAM disk is needed. The
initial RAM disk allows a modular kernel to have access to modules
that it might need to boot from before the kernel has access to the
device where the modules normally reside.
On the Red Hat Enterprise Linux architectures other than IBM
eServer iSeries, the initial RAM disk can be created with the
mkinitrd command. However, this step is
performed automatically if the kernel and its associated packages
are installed or upgraded from the RPM packages distributed by Red
Hat, Inc.; thus, it does not need to be executed manually. To
verify that it was created, use the command ls
-l /boot to make sure the initrd-<version>.img file was created (the
version should match the version of the kernel just installed).
On iSeries systems, the initial RAM disk file and vmlinux file are combined into one file, which is
created with the addRamDisk command. This
step is performed automatically if the kernel and its associated
packages are installed or upgraded from the RPM packages
distributed by Red Hat, Inc.; thus, it does not need to be executed
manually. To verify that it was created, use the command ls -l /boot to make sure the /boot/vmlinitrd-<kernel-version> file was created
(the version should match the version of the kernel just
installed).
The next step is to verify that the boot loader has been
configured to boot the new kernel. Refer to Section 37.6 Verifying the Boot
Loader for details.