Could I use this same solution to specify a particular System.map that I
want to use? If so, what is the syntax? I have multiple kernels that I boot
in to but each one has its own System.map. Although I can specify which
kernel I want to boot in to within the LILO prompt, there does not seem to
be
On Sun, 6 Jun 1999, Jimmy Garcia wrote:
> Hi! I think I found out what is causing Linux to run so slow on my
> computer!! I typed in the stuff Bernhard mentioned and found out that
> Linux thinks I only have 13MB of RAM!!
You apparently have a very broken BIOS then. I haven't seen this problem
f
> Jimmy Garcia wrote:
>
> Hi! I think I found out what is causing Linux to run so slow on my
> computer!! I typed in the stuff Bernhard mentioned and found out that
> Linux thinks I only have 13MB of RAM!! I really have 128 MB of pc100
> sdram!
>
> How do I let linux know that there's 128mb of
> Jimmy Garcia wrote:
>
> Hi! I think I found out what is causing Linux to run so slow on my
> computer!! I typed in the stuff Bernhard mentioned and found out that
> Linux thinks I only have 13MB of RAM!! I really have 128 MB of pc100
> sdram!
>
> How do I let linux know that there's 128mb of
This is what it said when I typed in
'Free'
[root@localhost /root]#
free
total
used free
shared buffers
cachedMem: 13604
13324
280
7492
304 6448-/+
buffers/cache: 6572 7032Swap
369452 9068 360384
Hi! I think I found out what is causing Linux to
run so slow on my computer!! I typed in the stuff Bernhard mentioned and found
out that Linux thinks I only have 13MB of RAM!! I really have 128 MB of
pc100 sdram!
How do I let linux know that there's 128mb of
ram?
If it's really running