On Fri, 08 Apr 2005 21:02:27 -0500, Kevin Kinsey <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Gabrielle Harrison & Paul van den Bergen wrote:
OK, thanks for the info... now for the solution...
I have more than 16 MB of ram available but it does nto seem to
play well together or there is a problem with some of the chips.
How do I trouble shoot my RAM chips? for instance, if I swap the
2 SIMMs I have in there atm it does not want to do the POST. is
POST success sufficient to conclude that the chips are OK? is there a
BSD utility to check or diagnose RAM condition or errors?
(ahhh the joys of old hardware...)
*g*, Yeah. I've got piles of it. Some of them are
my primary DNS/web machines, :-p
As to the question -- Hmm, what should I say?
yeah... which turned out to be my saviour... I dug out an old pile of
MBs... which still had there mem chips intact, now have 98 MB in the
machine, loading happily as I typo...
(1st, a parenthetical observation --- the FBSD list doesn't like
"top posting" much, and you forgot to cc: the list: many people
request that you keep all this discussion _on_ the list for a couple
of reasons. However, you're probably new to all this; consider
forgiveness extended, but try to play nicer next time? Nothing
personal, you understand ... just a "heads up" for the future)
No problems, thanks for the headsup... Not intentional, just used to lists
that do auto-reply-to as default... :-) but I guess this is flame war
material here... personally I have found top posting more useable as I
tend to scan the email top first to see if I want to read... I can see the
point though, in-line or bottom post presumably being prefered for some
reason ;-) guess it's a style thing, one that I'm not fussed by, so I'll
tow the line...
The standard answer for "RAM issues" is to download the
program "memtest86", which is available for most any
computing platform. (e.g., it's OS independent once
you create the floppy disk). Running this program will create
a bootable floppy disk that you stick in the box, boot
into, and it runs tests all day long until you shut it down.
I believe you want http://www.memtest.org
IIRC, you may be able to get a log/report from it, so
you don't have to sit there through $n iterations of
the test and watch the screen for errors, but YMMV.
As for mixing chips, it's been a long, long time, and I
was more like a "hobbyist" then (maybe still am), but
I do seem to remember it was a "no no" to mix EDO
and FP chips, or some such, blah blah
HTH,
Kevin Kinsey
ta! that looks just what I want... Knowing the hardware is fine goes a
long way to solving bugs ;-)
--
## Paul van den Bergen,
# Gabrielle Harrison
# # # & Anja van den Bergen
# # 848 High Street Rd
## Glen Waverley VIC 3150 Australia
# ## [EMAIL PROTECTED]
# # ph: +613 9886 3160
# mob: 042 886 3160
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