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On Thu, 28 Nov 1996, Eloy A. Paris wrote: > Hi, > > At 02:05 PM 11/28/96 PST, you wrote: > > >Can you revert to the 2.0.6 kernel and tell us if that one causes a problem? > > Nope, it didn't work. I re-installed a fresh kernel source tree (2.0.7), > re-configured it for my basic hardware (IDE, NE2100 compatible card, serial > driver, MS-DOS+ext2 fs support and nothing else), and re-booted and it did > not work. This time a got: > > LILO Loading Linux > Uncompressing Linux... > > crc error > > -- System Halted > > Now, if I press the reset button, or cycle power, Linux will come back as if > nothing happened. It will be up for days... unless I execute a reboot > command (reboot, shutdown -r). > > In my opinion, this error is another side effect of the real cause. Consider > the three different effects I am seeing (one at a time, of course): > > 1) A sequence of 1-3-3 beeps: this means "1st 64KB RAM chip or data line > failure" (according to the computer's manual) > 2) The BIOS displays something like "Memory failure at XXXX: expected YYYY > and found ZZZZ - Decreasing available memory, please run setup program." > 3) CRC error after decompressing the kernel. > > All of the above situations could be caused by "kernel interaction with > BIOS, possibly related to memory management bits not cleared by reset on > your system" (as Bruce Perens said) > > I have another machine exactly the same as this one (same model, same > memory) I can take my hard drive to that machine and I bet it will do the > same. It has to be a software problem. > > Uhhmmm... should I try and go back to 2.0.0??? Any ideas??? I am lost. I had > not seen anything like this before. > > Eloy.- > > -- > > Eloy A. Paris > Information Technology > Rockwell Automation de Venezuela > Telephone: +58-2-9432311 Fax: +58-2-9430323 > > Are you enabled the shadow memory on your bios setup? I had a similar (but less critical) problem with older Kernel (and WinNT at the same time) and disabled the shadow memory resolved the problem. Although, I heard somewhere that some new board just don't reset correctly the hardware in soft reboot. They just don't reset the hardware letting the initial call resetting itself... It's just a suggestion. I'm not an expert!!! - --------------------------------------------------------------- "When all else fails, read the instructions." -- Cahn's Axiom - --------------------------------------------------------------- Fabien Ninoles aka Baffouille || Running Debian-Linux [EMAIL PROTECTED] || Lover of MOO, mountains, http://www-edu.gel.usherb.ca/ninf01 || poetry and Freedom. - --------------------------------------------------------------- -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: 2.6.3i Charset: noconv iQCVAwUBMp7rUFX6fc7jcjhFAQFZJAQAvXNc1ca/pdLGFzwK94o+aUoguWBCROR0 tVlDsDnAETJz/FW9/4czo3GucBwJT5gWOZOC57AxQ4w3ukIXdJtQDm3p1AVRfMRh boracck3DRWyBr4Pl/d7REfOXFdyvFjHrG2XA2h0kO+WOe1QYWQeLgedRdusBNWL +w2ngWWcLJk= =dTKt -----END PGP SIGNATURE----- -- TO UNSUBSCRIBE FROM THIS MAILING LIST: e-mail the word "unsubscribe" to [EMAIL PROTECTED] . Trouble? e-mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED]