[i re-send it here, since the other related bug is marked as archived ] Hi, i did some test with other distros (slackware/fedora) and the corruption problem seems to persist. Yesterday i was coming back to debian , dumping a dd backup image from an external WD hard disk, using a fedora usb-live, this way:
dc3dd if=./debian-backup-image of=/dev/sda1 hash=sha256 the partition image is ~2gB and before the end of the copy the system crashed. (sda1 is on the new SSD disk i bought ~ on May) so i rebooted fedora and i launched the command again , using a sequence of Ctrl-Z, 'sync', and 'fg' , each 500mB. the copy was successful this time. So i think the problem could be the new ram (8gB) i bought together with the SSD disk. So i replaced the hard disk and the ram with the old ones. (normal hd + 4gB ram. It's the original set of this notebook ). i rebooted fedora live-usb and i repeated the operation using as destination the sda1 partition of the original disk. It went ok with no problem, it copied 2gB in a time, without crashing. Now i'm trying debian wheezy on this non-SSD hard disk, with bumblebee enabled for a week (hoping it doesnt crash this time). After that , i'll dump the debian stable backup on sda1 of this same disk, to see how it is . If the tests will be successful in the next few days, it could mean that the problem was caused by some caching problem in the SSD , right? I still dont understand why the combination of those SSD + 8gB ram caused problems. I've just checked my syslog and i see that with this setup (wheezy + non-SSD + the old 4gB RAM) the AMI BIOS memory corruption message doesnt appear anymore. i'll upgrade the bug in the next few days with the outcomes of these tests. ciao, Asdrubale -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-bugs-dist-requ...@lists.debian.org with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact listmas...@lists.debian.org