Thank you!
On 1/23/2014 10:26 AM, compdoc wrote:
>How would I pull that off?
Computers have several common points of failure. They are the power
supply, the motherboard, RAM, cooling fans, and the hard drive.
Fans are easy - just make sure they are spinning at the proper speed.
This includes the fan inside the PSU.
If the motherboard is a few years old, it can develop bad capacitors.
(caps) They are easy to spot when you open the case. Any caps that are
rounded on top, are bad. Some even leak. If so, replace the
motherboard. Here are some sample pictures:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Capacitor_plague
Cheap power supplies often develop bad caps inside too, but it's
dangerous to open the PSU so just swap it out to test. Sometimes you
can see the caps inside if you just look through the openings.
Bad Ram is more rare, but you can test it for free by booting
memtest86 or memtest86+. At least 3 or 4 passes is best. I've had bad
ram that didn't show up until 5 test passes. I like to let the tests
run overnight when possible.
The hard drive is easy. There's no need to run any tests - you just
read the drive's SMART info. It records when sectors are failing, and
when other bad things happen. PfSense has a SMART Status menu under
Diagnostics.
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