Using -current on a Fujitsu Lifebook N5010 (no Atheros 802.11,
no Ethernet, + hard freezes)
Brian Fundakowski Feldman
green at freebsd.org
Wed Jul 21 03:24:25 PDT 2004
On Wed, Jul 21, 2004 at 12:04:22AM -0700, Julian Elischer wrote:
> Jake Hamby wrote:
> > 3) Random freezes
>
> >
> > After an average of 30-40 minutes of heavy usage, I get random system
> > freezes. I am typically running XFree86 and downloading something
> > or reading web pages at the time it happens. More disturbingly, I am
> > occasionally seeing files get renamed, for example
> > /usr/src/UPDATING.64BIT became /usr/src/UPDATING.64BTT. This happens
> > with or without WITNESS, with INVARIANTS enabled, with or without
> > ACPI, and with or without SMP. I am using SCHED_ULE and no
> > PREEMPTION.
>
> you are not alone.. I think you just chose a bad moment to
> jump into -current
> :-/
Who else is getting random memory corruption? I've only ever seen it
in my life with bad RAM/bad cooling, but this could be bad anything,
including something spamming random addresses with DMA. The characters
'I' and 'T' are far enough apart such that I wouldn't expect a simple
memory error which usually seems to appear as a single bit flip.
I don't think this is normal at all. Try burning memtest86 to a floppy
or CD to ascertain a a bit more about your hardware, first. If it's a
piece of hardware randomly DMAing around, taht's certainly pretty
terrible. It would be awesome if someone had a utility to map all of
the memory in a running system out into a format showing who allocated
it, and what it's doing (contigmalloc, malloc, zone, user, free, cached
memory information). I would think if you knew the memory getting
corrupted and what was reasonably close to it, you could make some
guesses as to what's doing it.
--
Brian Fundakowski Feldman \'[ FreeBSD ]''''''''''\
<> green at FreeBSD.org \ The Power to Serve! \
Opinions expressed are my own. \,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,\
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