> Have you ascertained it's a hardware problem? Do the kernel stacks you > receive seem completely random? Does the kernel always oops on the same > EIP or at least related EIP's? Have you examined the cores generated from > the segfaults? In any event, if it is indeed a hardware issue, the problem > is very likely to be in the memory. A broken disk does not usually cause > such behavior and the probability of failure in other mechanisms is > somewhat lower. > > Regards, Yotam Rubin >
I haven't written the EIPs because the computer was being used as a screenless router. I'll try to do this from now on. Tell me how to make it generate cores, and how to examine them please? I've never done that before. The memory checked ok with memtest86+, but perhaps it's some problem with the motherboard, or the integral IDE controller? Haggai Eran [EMAIL PROTECTED] ================================================================= To unsubscribe, send mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with the word "unsubscribe" in the message body, e.g., run the command echo unsubscribe | mail [EMAIL PROTECTED]
