If you don't suspect any errant process, then you might want to check if
the RAM is good (memtest86). OR it could be a loose contact between the
RAM endcontacts and the socket too!


-Naren

On Sat, 26 Jan 2002, Suresh Ramasubramanian wrote:

> +++ H.S.Rai [linux-india] <26/01/02 02:37 +0530>:
> > Thank you Suresh for your suggestion, guidance. Can this be
> > due to faulty RAM.
> 
> ... in which case your machine wouldn't even have booted up, most of the
> time.  Maybe, may not be.  Like I said, wasting time guessing what is going
> on is no use.  Look at logs, vmstat, dmesg etc.
> 
>       -srs (good morning, off to sleep now.  5 AM already)
> 
> -- 
> Suresh Ramasubramanian  <---->  mallet <at> efn dot org
> EMail Sturmbannfuhrer, Lower Middle Class Unix Sysadmin
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