On 13 August 2012 11:04, Klemen Ozebek <[email protected]> wrote:
> [    0.743322] Failed to disable AUX port, but continuing anyway... Is this
> a SiS?
> [    0.743324] If AUX port is really absent please use the 'i8042.noaux'
> option.

This looks a bit odd. Google suggests that disabling USB3 in the BIOS
can make this go away. It is probably nothing to do with the problem
though.


> [    0.885894] Write protecting the kernel text: 4540k
> [    0.885912] Write protecting the kernel read-only data: 1668k

I am not sure we normally see this.

> [    7.870685] fglrx: module license 'Proprietary. (C) 2002 - ATI
> Technologies, Starnberg, GERMANY' taints kernel.
> [    7.870688] Disabling lock debugging due to kernel taint

I don't think this is the problem either, but you could try switching
to the VESA driver.

> [   65.510633] RTAI[hal]: <3.8.1> mounted over IPIPE-NOTHREADS 2.6-03.
> [   65.510634] RTAI[hal]: compiled with gcc version 4.4.3 (Ubuntu
> 4.4.3-4ubuntu5) .
> [   65.510717] RTAI[hal]: mounted (IPIPE-NOTHREADS, IMMEDIATE (INTERNAL IRQs
> DISPATCHED), ISOL_CPUS_MASK: 0).
> [   65.510718] PIPELINE layers:
> [   65.510720] f8bf1e20 9ac15d93 RTAI 200
> [   65.510721] c085cb20 0 Linux 100
> [   65.525403] RTAI[malloc]: global heap size = 2097152 bytes, <BSD>.
> [   65.525541] RTAI[sched]: IMMEDIATE, MP, USER/KERNEL SPACE: <with RTAI OWN
> KTASKs>, kstacks pool size = 524288 bytes.
> [   65.525544] RTAI[sched]: hard timer type/freq = APIC/12554665(Hz);
> default timing: periodic; linear timed lists.
> [   65.525546] RTAI[sched]: Linux timer freq = 250 (Hz), TimeBase freq =
> 3415448000 hz.
> [   65.525547] RTAI[sched]: timer setup = 999 ns, resched latency = 2943 ns.
> [   65.525590] RTAI[usi]: enabled.
> [   65.542535] RTAI[math]: loaded.
> [   68.463216] RTAI[math]: unloaded.
> [   68.471266] SCHED releases registered named ALIEN RTGLBH
> [   68.532191] RTAI[malloc]: unloaded.
> [   68.632236] RTAI[sched]: unloaded (forced hard/soft/hard transitions:
> traps 0, syscalls 0).
> [   68.633784] I-pipe: Domain RTAI unregistered.
> [   68.633887] RTAI[hal]: unmounted.

This looks like a perfectly normal RTAI load, followed by an unload.
So there are no clues there as to what the problems might be.

--
atp
If you can't fix it, you don't own it.
http://www.ifixit.com/Manifesto


-- 
atp
If you can't fix it, you don't own it.
http://www.ifixit.com/Manifesto

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