On Thu, 28 Aug 2003, Don Bowman wrote:
I have machdep.ddb_on_nmi=1.
I can drop into the debugger with the magic
key sequence. However, when i hit the NMI
jumper, i don't always go there. Sometimes
I do.
The system is 4-way SMP [2xHTT xeon processors]
with 4.7.
Any suggestion on where my
From: Mike Silbersack [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
On Thu, 28 Aug 2003, Don Bowman wrote:
I have machdep.ddb_on_nmi=1.
I can drop into the debugger with the magic
key sequence. However, when i hit the NMI
jumper, i don't always go there. Sometimes
I do.
The system is 4-way SMP [2xHTT
On Thu, Sep 04, 2003 at 09:16:23AM -0400, Don Bowman wrote:
From: Mike Silbersack [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
On Thu, 28 Aug 2003, Don Bowman wrote:
I have machdep.ddb_on_nmi=1.
I can drop into the debugger with the magic
key sequence. However, when i hit the NMI
jumper, i don't
In [EMAIL PROTECTED], on 09/04/03
at 09:12 AM, Peter Pentchev [EMAIL PROTECTED] said:
I haven't kept quite up to date on my x86 hardware lately (read: in the
past five to ten years), but I distinctly remember a time when everyone
referred to x86's NMI as a joke: a non-maskable interrupt that
On 04-Sep-2003 [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
In [EMAIL PROTECTED], on 09/04/03
at 09:12 AM, Peter Pentchev [EMAIL PROTECTED] said:
I haven't kept quite up to date on my x86 hardware lately (read: in the
past five to ten years), but I distinctly remember a time when everyone
referred to x86's
I have machdep.ddb_on_nmi=1.
I can drop into the debugger with the magic
key sequence. However, when i hit the NMI
jumper, i don't always go there. Sometimes
I do.
The system is 4-way SMP [2xHTT xeon processors]
with 4.7.
Any suggestion on where my NMI might be going?
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