On Thu, Mar 23, 2006 at 09:31:38AM +1030, Damon McMahon wrote:
> Greetings,
re

> For the second time in a week the following kernel panic has occured
> on boot. In between these two events the firewall has booted many
> times without issue.
> 
> booting hd0a:/bsd: 4686336+945680 [52+241344+223335]=0x5d08e0
> entry point at 0x100120
> 
> [ using 465104 bytes of bsd ELF symbol table ]
> Copyright (c) 1982, 1986, 1989, 1991, 1993
>         The Regents of the University of California.  All rights reserved.
> Copyright (c) 1995-2005 OpenBSD. All rights reserved.  http://www.OpenBSD.org
> 
> OpenBSD 3.7 (GENERIC) #1: Mon Mar  6 15:39:23 CST 2006
>     [EMAIL PROTECTED]:/usr/src/sys/arch/i386/compile/GENERIC
> cpu0: Intel Pentium (P54C) ("GenuineIntel" 586-class) 75 MHz
> cpu0: FPU,V86,DE,PSE,TSC,MSR,MCE,CX8
> cpu0: F00F bug workaround installed
> real mem  = 41525248 (40552K)
> avail mem = 30085120 (29380K)
> using 532 buffers containing 2179072 bytes (2128K) of memory
> mainbus0 (root)
> bios0 at mainbus0: AT/286+(00) BIOS, date 10/10/94, BIOS32 rev. 0 @ 0xf6f20
> apm0 at bios0: Power Management spec V1.1
> apm0: AC on, battery charge unknown
> uvm_fault(0xd05b21e0, 0x0, 0, 1) -> e
> kernel: page fault trap, code=0
> Stopped at      lockmgr+0x1a:   movl    0x4(%esi),%eax
> ddb>
> 
> Is this (very old) hardware just giving up the ghost, bad RAM (I've
> seen a couple of mentions in the archives pointing to this), some
> other component in need of replacement, or something else worth
> investigating further?

very possible that this is related to the apm driver or apm in your bios.
try boot disable apm in ukc (boot -c; disable apm; exit;)

cu
-- 
    paranoic mickey       (my employers have changed but, the name has remained)

Reply via email to