I would like to see full dump of 'vidcontrol -i adapter',
'vidcontrol -i mode' and dmesg after the vesa module is loaded
(you get very verbose output from the vesa module init code
if you boot the kernel with 'boot -v').
I think this is what you asked for, otherwise please let me know.
Bye,
Andrea Campi [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
Ok, I will try each one. At the moment, I'm using logo_saver.
I will let you know.
Take a long hard look at vesa_set_mode() and vesa_set_origin() in
sys/i386/isa/vesa.c. If the panic occurs while the console is still in
text mode, the bug is in
Andrea Campi [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
Ok, I will try each one. At the moment, I'm using logo_saver.
I will let you know.
Take a long hard look at vesa_set_mode() and vesa_set_origin() in
sys/i386/isa/vesa.c. If the panic occurs while the console is still in
text mode, the bug is in
db x/i,10 0xc025ad3c
scrn_timer: pushl %ebp
[...]
nm just confirmed this, so it definitely looks like scrn_timer is to blame
here. Any other instructions? ;-) For the time being, vidcontrol -t off
(seems to) keep the machine up.
Bye,
Andrea
Weird, I don't see
On 05-Dec-00 Andrea Campi wrote:
db x/i,10 0xc025ad3c
scrn_timer: pushl %ebp
[...]
nm just confirmed this, so it definitely looks like scrn_timer is to blame
here. Any other instructions? ;-) For the time being, vidcontrol -t off
(seems to) keep the machine up.
Bye,
More details: this is an IBM Thinkpad laptop with APM enabled and in the
kernel.
As usual, any hint is more than welcome. This used to work...
Which screen saver? Does it do it with all of them? Just graphical ones, just
text ones, just green_saver, etc.?
Rrrright... I can assure you
On 05-Dec-00 Andrea Campi wrote:
More details: this is an IBM Thinkpad laptop with APM enabled and in the
kernel.
As usual, any hint is more than welcome. This used to work...
Which screen saver? Does it do it with all of them? Just graphical ones,
just
text ones, just green_saver,
Just as a data point, I just tried this as well... The daemon saver was ok,
the fire saver was ok, but as soon as I loaded logo_saver and it activated,
I got a 'dc0 timeout'(?) and I was unable to access any of the vtys after
that... I could switch vtys, but could not type anything.
The
Sorry, I guess I should specify that this is a desktop with APM enabled in
the BIOS, but not being used otherwise... VESA module loaded.
#uname -a
FreeBSD cae88-102-101.sc.rr.com 5.0-CURRENT FreeBSD 5.0-CURRENT #0: Sat Dec 2
16:07:54 EST 2000 [EMAIL
Bad callout handler: c_func = 0xc025ad3c, c_arg=0xc0338460, c_flags=7
First I tried a
db x/i,10 0xc025ad3c
scrn_timer: pushl %ebp
[...]
nm just confirmed this, so it definitely looks like scrn_timer is to blame
here. Any other instructions? ;-) For the time being,
We want mtxd_file and mtxd_line. If you look at the output of the last
command, it will probably look something like this:
../../kern/kern_timeout.c, line 139
Hope it helps,
Andrea
--
Andrea Campi mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
I.NET S.p.A.
On 29-Nov-00 Andrea Campi wrote:
We want mtxd_file and mtxd_line. If you look at the output of the last
command, it will probably look something like this:
../../kern/kern_timeout.c, line 139
Hmm, and the failed assertion was:
panic: mutex Giant owned at ../../kern/kern_intr.c:238
So
Then when it panics write down the values that get printed out. Next,
do 'nm /sys/compile/MYKERNEL/kernel.debug | sort' and look for the function
whose address matches the c_func address printed out, then send this info back
please. :)
This time it took me 1 hour to get the panic, compared
On 29-Nov-00 Andrea Campi wrote:
Then when it panics write down the values that get printed out. Next,
do 'nm /sys/compile/MYKERNEL/kernel.debug | sort' and look for the function
whose address matches the c_func address printed out, then send this info
back
please. :)
This time it took
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