Looks like you've covered the bases.  It is probably not memory but just to 
be sure run the full set of tests overnight.

When did you take the case off?  On my systems I have to have the case sides 
on or the temperature goes way up.  Yes, it sounds weird but these are server 
cases and evidently the airflow routing is designed correctly!

I saw some lockups in the last week - two weeks but I can't reproduce them.  
I was running a lot of stuff in xfce4 (gimp, etc.) and the box locked solid.  
Couldn't even ssh to it - like Mark's did.  Since then it hasn't happened.



On Saturday 29 November 2003 21:30, you wrote:
> On Saturday 29 November 2003 07:52 pm, Brett I. Holcomb 
wrote:http://bugs.gentoo.org/show_bug.cgi?id=33525
> > Ernie, check the inside of the case and make sure it's clean and
> > dust free and ALL the fans are running.  I would also run memtest86
> Brett,
>       I ran the standard tests with mentest86 yesterday, no errors found.
> Cpuburn has been running for 15 minutes and "sensors" shows that the
> CPU has  leveled off at 52 deg. C and the chipset is at 48 C.
>       From the daemon log, I see that the crash that I saw this morning
> occurred between 3:50 and 4:00 AM. There are no cron jobs running
> then and I was sound asleep. The late morning crash happened with top
> running on the desktop showing 165 megs RAM free, no swap used and
> 98% idle CPU. The powersupply is a relatively new 450 watt beast with
> dual fans. Both case fans are clean as is the CPU cooler and fan, and
> the box is on top of the stack with the left cover off. (I put a
> friend's HDD in temporarily a week ago to back up his data before
> reinstalling his {yuck} Win98)
>       The best I can figure, the problems started after the last updates on
> 11/26, some of which are listed in my original post. One I didn't
> include, is gtk-gnutella which has been running nearly constantly
> since it was upgraded. I'll try shutting it down before bed and see
> what happens.

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