On Tue, Feb 15, 2000 at 02:56:42PM -0500, Bob Brown generated a stream of 1s and 0s: > I just received this message while booting up. I had removed an sdram chip, > ( going from 128 to 64m pc100) and turned the box on. What does this mean? > ... > VFS: Mounted root (ext2 filesystem) readonly. > Unable to handle kernel paging request at virtual address c8000000 > current->tss.cr3 = 00082000, %cr3 = 00082000 > *pde = 00000000 > Oops: 0000 > CPU: 0 > EIP: 0010:[<0012b151>] > EFLAGS: 00010216 > eax: 0008afff ebx: 07ffe000 ecx: 000020000 edx: 00000c2f > esi: 08000000 edi: 003b6f58 ebp: 003b6f5c esp: 00cb6f18 > ds: 0018 es: 0018 fs: 002b gs: 002b ss: 0018 > Process init (pid: 1, process nr: 1, stackpage=003b6000) > Stack:{ > > > } 3x8x8 array of hex dump > Call Trace: [<0012b3ce>] [<001228e5>] [<00122a6b>] [<0010a601>] > Code: 8a 06 46 84 c0 75 f4 84 c0 74 4c 8b 54 24 24 ff 82 80 00 00
Looks like your kernel crashed due to a hardware error. It's possible that you zapped your memory chips with ESD. -- Get the truth or risk frying your brains! --> www.truthinlabeling.org <--