On Fri, 2003-06-13 at 15:19, Ronald J. Hall wrote:
Why?
I've never had this behavior before out of a Mandrake setup.
As root, I can type in updatedb at a shell, and it will run for 2-3 mins, as
per usual, then suddenly, monitor goes black, and machine spontaneously
reboots.
I have an
On Friday 13 June 2003 02:01 am, Stephen Kuhn wrote:
* Double check all your system path(s) in the /etc/profile, the .bashrc
of your home account, the /etc/ld.so.conf
.bashrc looks okay - I have a lot of aliases in there but they are valid.
ld.co.conf looks like this:
/usr/X11R6/lib
On Friday June 13 2003 09:04 am, Ronald J. Hall wrote:
Now here's an odd one - df and kdisk neither one show a swap? Is
there some trick to seeing it? (IIRC it always showed up before)
Neither df or any GUI for it will show swap because /swap has no
file system. 'fdisk -l' (as root that's a
On Friday 13 June 2003 01:21 pm, Tom Brinkman wrote:
Neither df or any GUI for it will show swap because /swap has no
file system. 'fdisk -l' (as root that's a lower case L), or
'free -m' (as user) will show your swap partition. Sometimes it's
useful to clear the swap. As root,
On Friday 13 June 2003 07:52 pm, Kaj Haulrich wrote:
Or : if you are a little concerned about using fdisk ( I am )
you can just ( from a terminal ) type *top*. Then, at the top
of the screen swap usage is displayed ( an updated ) every now
and then. To get out of *top* just press *q*.
HTH
On Friday 13 June 2003 07:27 pm, Stephen Kuhn wrote:
On Sat, 2003-06-14 at 00:04, Ronald J. Hall wrote:
* Check the size of your SWAP
Now here's an odd one - df and kdisk neither one show a swap? Is there
some trick to seeing it? (IIRC it always showed up before)
fdisk -l
(fdisk list
Why?
I've never had this behavior before out of a Mandrake setup.
As root, I can type in updatedb at a shell, and it will run for 2-3 mins, as
per usual, then suddenly, monitor goes black, and machine spontaneously
reboots.
I have an 80 gig HD.
and usually...some kind of damage is done.
This