Unbelievable!
I have no idea why my system with 32GB of memory is still haunted by this dumb 
issue.
The ssh got completely unresponsive, even with a physical monitor and keyboard 
attached to the system, when this happens and the only solution to get back 
control is a hard reset.
Man.. if anyone from upstream cares about this issue at least give user a 
prompt to kill the problematic process manually.
Rendering the full system unresponsive like this is unacceptable.

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https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/159356

Title:
  When DMA is disabled system freeze on high memory usage

Status in linux package in Ubuntu:
  Incomplete
Status in linux package in Arch Linux:
  New

Bug description:
  I run a batch matlab job server here at my lab, running Dapper 6.06 (for the 
LTS). One of the users has submitted a very memory-consuming job, which 
successfully crashes the server. Upon closer inspection, the crash happens like 
this:
  1. I run matlab with the given file (as an ordinary, unpriveleged user)
  2. RAM usage quickly fills up
  3. Once the RAM meter hits 100%, the system freezes: All SSH connections 
freeze up, and while switching VTs directly on the machine works, no new 
processes run - so one can't log in, or do anything if he is logged in. 
(Sometimes typing doesn't work at all)

  Note that the swap - while 7 gigs of it are available - is never used.
  (The machine has 7 gigs of RAM as well)

  I've tried the same on my Gutsy 32-bit box, and there was no system
  freezeup - matlab simply notified that the system was out of memory.
  However, it did this once memory was 100% in use - and still, swap
  didn't get used at all! (Though it is mounted correctly and shows up
  in "top" and "free").

  So first thing's first - I'd like to eliminate the crash issue. I
  suppose I could switch the server to 32-bit, but I think that would be
  a performance loss, considering that it does a lot of heavy
  computation. There is no reason, however, that this should happen on a
  64-bit machine anyway. Why does it?

  WORKAROUND: Enabling DMA in the BIOS

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