Check the power supply and ram. So many times similar things like this has
happened to me, and almost every time it was a stick of ram with some bad
bits on it, or an underpowered/going bad PSU.
**
Jeremy D. Pavleck
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
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At 01:17 AM 9/10/03 +0200, Raphaël Marmier wrote:
heat? Both could be overheating the same way if it is the same hardware in
the same room under identical conditions. Try to move one to the fridge
and see if it stop freezing ;)
Actually, it's rebooting randomly during installs or upgrades
heat? Both could be overheating the same way if it is the same hardware
in the same room under identical conditions. Try to move one to the
fridge and see if it stop freezing ;)
Raphaël
Le Mercredi, 10 sep 2003, à 14:38 Europe/Zurich, Dragoncrest a écrit :
As in hardware fault? Hmm, I
As in hardware fault? Hmm, I'd almost be willing to believe that
but I've got an identical machine which acts as it's backup that does the
same thing from time to time. And it's never in the same way in the same
spot or doing the same thing. That's what's puzzling the living heck out
Was just going about doing an upgrade to my primary mail server yesterday
and right in the middle of it doing its thing I hear a beep, it stops, then
reboots. No warnings, no errors, nothing. Just reboots. Tracking it back
I was somewhere in the middle of upgrading /usr/ports/dns/p5-net-dns