Is that a standard (non-realtime) kernel?  If not, can you also test a
standard kernel configuration (linux-image-3.2.0-3-amd64)?

Identical behaviour on linux-image-3.2.0-3-amd64

Please try booting with the extra kernel parameters:

   memory_corruption_check=1 memory_corruption_check_size=640K 
memory_corruption_check_period=5

Does that avoid the problem, and if so what does the kernel log show
after you plug in the device?

It seems that X86_CHECK_BIOS_CORRUPTION is disabled in the Debian kernels. I'm compiling a custom one with it enabled and will post any significant results.



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