This appears to be related to a CD media defect, or a host memory
problem. The kernel fault is quite fundamental. I suggest running the
memory test first, then the media check to make sure your platform is
sane.
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So i should use the memory test on the install CD? I have re-burned the CD
at the slowest speed and i am now going to test the memory to determine
where the problem might be.
On 3/29/07, Tim Gardner [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
This appears to be related to a CD media defect, or a host memory
Yes. Use the memory test on the install CD.
On 3/29/07, Ryan [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
So i should use the memory test on the install CD? I have re-burned the CD
at the slowest speed and i am now going to test the memory to determine
where the problem might be.
On 3/29/07, Tim Gardner
test 5 reported 6 errors - i assume this means that I have a bad stick of
memory that could have caused this problem. If you have any suggestions to
correcting the problem please let me know. Thanks for the help.
On 3/29/07, Phillip Lougher [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Yes. Use the memory test
An application of cash seems appropriate :)
** Changed in: linux-source-2.6.17 (Ubuntu)
Status: Confirmed = Rejected
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If you have more than one DIMM, it is always worth testing them
individually to pin-point the bad DIMM.
When removing DIMMs or testing them individually make sure you observe
any motherboard restrictions. Normally if you have more than one DIMM
on a channel they must be matched, and if you're
Obviously keep in mind you may have a faulty DIMM slot or motherboard.
Although this is less likely than a faulty DIMM.
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I was actually able to solve this problem by chaging BIOS settings,
specifically I changed
Configure SDRAM by SPD from disabled to Enabled
SDRAM frequency changed to Auto
SDRAM Command Rate changed from 1T to 2T
I think this was just an issue of the ram not being able to keep up with the
Exit code 139 is a segmentation fault; in this particular context, that
basically means that there's been a problem reading from the CD, and the
squashfs errors in your logs support that theory. This is generally due
to a faulty CD/DVD disk or drive, rather than being an installer bug as
such. It
** Attachment added: /var/log/partman:
http://librarian.launchpad.net/7039079/partman
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** Attachment added: /var/log/syslog
http://librarian.launchpad.net/7039075/syslog
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