Control: tag -1 + moreinfo Hello,
On Fri, Apr 10, 2026 at 02:31:16PM +0200, Hendrik Bruinsma wrote: > Package: src:linux > Version: 6.19.10-1 > Severity: important > X-Debbugs-Cc: [email protected] > User: [email protected] > Usertags: amd64 > > Dear Maintainer, > > It looks like (as far as I can see with the information of the crashlog), > the > wifi module caused a kernel panic. > Is there in anyway I can add more information to help out with this? > > > Cheers, Hendrik > > ------ > > Below the kernel panic log: > > [60324.959946] Tainted: [D]=DIE > [60324.959947] Hardware name: HP HP EliteBook X G1a 14 AI/8D08, BIOS X88 > Ver. > 01.01.02 11/08/2024 > [60324.959948] RIP: 0010:__kmem_cache_alloc_bulk+0x66/0x220 > [60324.959959] Code: 48 83 c0 20 65 48 03 05 c0 ec 57 02 c6 00 01 48 85 d2 > 0f > 84 b9 01 00 00 49 89 d5 31 db 45 31 e4 eb 34 41 8b 57 30 48 8d 34 02 <48> 8b > 14 > 10 49 33 97 c0 00 00 00 48 0f ce 48 31 f2 49 89 10 48 89 > [60324.959960] RSP: 0018:ffffcb8980defbe8 EFLAGS: 00010086 > [60324.959962] RAX: affece1108100624 RBX: 0000000000000000 RCX: > 0000000000000283 > [60324.959963] RDX: 0000000000000070 RSI: affece1108100694 RDI: RAX and RSI look fishy, typically they contain pointers that on x86 start with ffff. So on first glance that looks like a memory corruption. Is your machine over-clocked? Can you try a memory test on your machine using the memtest86+ package? If that finds something loading safe defaults in the BIOS might help, or switching RAM dimms. Best regards Uwe
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