Try testing the memory in the system -- use memtest86. Run through all the 
tests (takes about 24 hours on your average system), and see what it shows 
up. Memory's always the first thing I test when I start seeing `random' 
instability in a system.

Cheers,

Matt

P.S. If memtest turns up a fault, trying moving your memory about the 
slots, and rerunning. If it still fails, tweak the latencies in BIOS, and 
try again.

At 23:59 27/05/2002, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
>On 27 May, Jeff Waugh wrote:
> >  Depends on your kernel. What are you running?
>
>2.4.18
>
> >  > RIVA TNT2 32MB - NVidia Riva Ultra 64 rev 21, Mem @ 0xd6000000/24
> >
> >  Using the Free or proprietary driver?
>
>Free I assume - well, whatever comes with RH 7.2 by default.
>
>Incidentally, I've tried loading up the CPU, and the CPU monitor
>agrees, and it hasn't had a problem.  But there's just me logged in, so
>from "top" I see that the memory use still gives me 90MB free as I type
>this.
>
>luke
>
>--
>SLUG - Sydney Linux User's Group - http://slug.org.au/
>More Info: http://lists.slug.org.au/listinfo/slug


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