Is there a way to test that fact? I've tried to work with lm_sensors, but the readings for that are way way off. So, considering lm_sensors isuseless is there another way to tell if overheating is the problem?
The case itself has a lot of fans, but it's also got 5 harddrives in it. On Tue, 6 Dec 2005, Daniel Gryniewicz wrote: > Date: Tue, 06 Dec 2005 18:39:48 -0500 > From: Daniel Gryniewicz <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > Reply-To: [email protected] > To: [email protected] > Subject: Re: [gentoo-amd64] mce log errors > > On Tue, 2005-12-06 at 14:56 -0600, Deedra Waters wrote: > > All, > > > > I'm getting a lot of these, but it only seems to happen when i put the > > machine under a lot of stress, and even then it's not always happening. > > This machine is a duel opteron 242, the board is an asus k8, and with > > the latest bios update, the machine has no real problems at all. > > > > MCE 1 > > CPU 0 4 northbridge TSC 8f1a7b270b6f > > ADDR 75c3320 > > Northbridge ECC error > > ECC syndrome = 62 > > bit32 = err cpu0 > > bit46 = corrected ecc error > > bus error 'local node origin, request didn't time out > > generic read mem transaction > > memory access, level generic' > > STATUS 9431400100000813 MCGSTATUS 0 > > MCE 2 > > CPU 0 2 bus unit TSC 8f8ad2325db7 > > L2 cache ECC error > > Bus or cache array error > > bit46 = corrected ecc error > > bit62 = error overflow (multiple errors) > > bus error 'local node origin, request didn't time out > > prefetch mem transaction > > memory access, level generic' > > STATUS d000400000000863 MCGSTATUS 0 > > CPU cache is getting ECC errors. Smells like overheating. > > Daniel > -- Deedra Waters - Gentoo developer relations, accessibility and infrastructure - [EMAIL PROTECTED] Gentoo linux: http://www.gentoo.org -- [email protected] mailing list
