Re: Crashdumps available for download (solved I think)

2002-09-19 Thread Martin Blapp
Hi all, With help of http://www.memtest86.com/memtest86-3.0.iso I've tracked it down to three 3 ! bad DRAMS. Sorry about all this. Still unsolved is the options PSE options PG_G stuff with Ram that passes all tests. Corruption there still happens. Martin Martin Blapp, <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> <

Re: Crashdumps available for download (solved I think)

2002-09-19 Thread Bernd Walter
On Thu, Sep 19, 2002 at 11:16:10AM +0200, Martin Blapp wrote: > > Hi all, > > With help of http://www.memtest86.com/memtest86-3.0.iso I've tracked > it down to three 3 ! bad DRAMS. D-RAM is bad per definition. There's a reason why good machines always use ECC. It's just a matter how likely erro

memory/filesystem corruption, a cautionary tale (was: Re: Crashdumps available for download (solved I think))

2002-09-27 Thread Don Lewis
On 19 Sep, Martin Blapp wrote: > > Hi all, > > With help of http://www.memtest86.com/memtest86-3.0.iso I've tracked > it down to three 3 ! bad DRAMS. Thanks for the pointer. I have continued to see transient filesystem damage that would disappear with a reboot, which made me suspect that the f

Re: memory/filesystem corruption, a cautionary tale (was: Re: Crashdumps available for download (solved I think))

2002-09-27 Thread Don Lewis
On 27 Sep, walt wrote: > Don Lewis wrote: > >> It looks like either my motherboard BIOS is incorrectly sensing the RAM >> speed, or it it senses the RAM speed correctly and is incorrectly >> configuring the RAM timing... > > Is there a BIOS upgrade available for that mb? Yes, but I didn't see a