On 23/08/14 17:52, Robert Moonen wrote:
> On 23/08/14 10:13, Brian May wrote:
>> Hello,
>>
>> Am having two strange problems that are starting to eerk me with this
>> (relatively new) computer, running Debian wheezy:
>>
>>
>> 1. If I boot anything later then 3.12 kernel, I don't get any
>> display. As in the monitors display black. No cursors of any sort.
>> Changing to a virtual console doesn't help. Booting in rescue mode
>> doesn't help (I think this rules out X-Windows being a problem). If I
>> go back to the 3.12 kernel, everything works perfectly. I also tried
>> plugging monitors into alternative ports just in case it is going to
>> the wrong place, but get nothing - in any case, under 3.12 the
>> computer seems pretty good at automatically working out what ports
>> are active under X-Windows.
>>
>> 01:00.0 VGA compatible controller: NVIDIA Corporation G96 [GeForce
>> 9500 GT] (rev a1)
>>
>> Am currently using the non-free nvidia drivers. Had exactly the same
>> symptoms when I installed the latest kernel without the non-free
>> nvidia kernel modules. I think the problem is occurring before X starts.
>
I had a similar problem with a rather old and  *different* Nvidia card
to yours and a late kernel (I think its 3.13 onwards?).  As I understand
the changes in the latest kernel breaks the Nvidia driver, and for my
card at least, Nvidia will not update their driver, as my card is quite
old.  Not sure, but could be yours is similarly affected? There are
patches, you supposedly can apply to the kernel source, but thats ugly,
and I tried that without success. :(.. - I did not struggle a lot with
it and gave up. (Reason I have not upgraded to latest kernel.)   Wheezy
here as well.  - In fact it appeared for me in Jessie and Ubuntu 14.04. 

Cheers
Daniel

> Best to solve one problem at a time, so video first, by the non-free
> drivers do you mean this one
> http://www.nvidia.com/object/linux-display-amd64-319.49-driver that
> seems to be the latest one. I am presently running Debian Wheezy on an
> i7 3820 with 8GB on a gigabyte mobo with a GT 520 video card and it is
> running just fine with kernel 3.2 and also using the actual nvidia
> driver, the driver I linked to covers both cards so would be a good
> place to start.
> As for the other problems you experience, this seems to be a
> contention/timeout problem, as no relatively new machine will ever
> take 30s to write a 2 kilobyte file.
>
> cheers
>
> Robert


>
>>
>> Computer seems to be up and running, and responsive to crl+alt+del
>> despite not having a display.
>>
>>
>> 2. There seems to be some weird performance problem. e.g. save a 2
>> kilobyte file in vim, and the computer can completely freeze (all
>> other windows, including xterms, stop responding to user input) for,
>> say 30 seconds, while it is writing that file. Chromium takes ages to
>> load with several tabs, and pages can fail to start properly while it
>> is doing so.
>>
>> Computer has 16GB RAM and is not using any swap. It has 11GB of
>> buffer/cache space:
>>
>>              total       used       free     shared    buffers     cached
>> Mem:           15G        13G       2.1G         0B       1.1G       7.9G
>> -/+ buffers/cache:       4.6G        11G
>> Swap:         3.8G         0B       3.8G
>>
>> Problems occurred before starting chromium, previously I wondered if
>> it was chromium's fault.
>>
>> This is moving disk + RAID1 + LVM + ext4. Bonnie++ results seem to be
>> pretty good, better in fact then my work computer, which doesn't
>> suffer from similar problems.
>>
>> Writing a byte at a time...done
>> Writing intelligently...done
>> Rewriting...done
>> Reading a byte at a time...done
>> Reading intelligently...done
>> start 'em...done...done...done...done...done...
>> Create files in sequential order...done.
>> Stat files in sequential order...done.
>> Delete files in sequential order...done.
>> Create files in random order...done.
>> Stat files in random order...done.
>> Delete files in random order...done.
>> Version  1.96       ------Sequential Output------ --Sequential Input-
>> --Random-
>> Concurrency   1     -Per Chr- --Block-- -Rewrite- -Per Chr- --Block--
>> --Seeks--
>> Machine        Size K/sec %CP K/sec %CP K/sec %CP K/sec %CP K/sec %CP
>>  /sec %CP
>> falidae      31904M  1228  94 107313   4 47471   2 +++++ +++ 137886  
>> 3 441.8   2
>> Latency             19141us   12435ms     251ms   19913us   88073us  
>>   283ms
>> Version  1.96       ------Sequential Create------ --------Random
>> Create--------
>> falidae             -Create-- --Read--- -Delete-- -Create-- --Read---
>> -Delete--
>>               files  /sec %CP  /sec %CP  /sec %CP  /sec %CP  /sec %CP
>>  /sec %CP
>>                  16 +++++ +++ +++++ +++ +++++ +++ +++++ +++ +++++ +++
>> +++++ +++
>> Latency                36us     223us     226us      36us      10us  
>>    24us
>> 1.96,1.96,falidae,1,1404290654,31904M,,1228,94,107313,4,47471,2,+++++,+++,137886,3,441.8,2,16,,,,,+++++,+++,+++++,+++,+++++,+++,+++++,+++,+++++,+++,+++++,+++,19141us,12435ms,251ms,19913us,88073us,283ms,36us,223us,226us,36us,10us,24us
>>
>>
>> I am currently working on a new theory that the performance problems
>> only occur when the computer is cold and first turned on. I think I
>> have seen evidence to disprove this, but guess I should run bonnie++
>> as soon as I turn the computer on, just to be sure.
>>
>>
>> Any other ideas?
>>
>> Thanks
>> -- 
>> Brian May <[email protected]
>> <mailto:[email protected]>>
>>
>>
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