I've got a Debian Woody server (three-year-old dual Xeon thing) and as a result of one or two little quirks (failed CRC sum for some gzipped files etc.), I decided to run memtest on it.
The memtest produced an error at location '00000000000 - 0.0MB', with output roughly as follows after running for about 16 hours (I've transcribed this, so it might not be 100% accurate): Tst Pass Failing Address Good Bad ErrBits Count Chan 8 1 00000000000 0.0MB uncorrected 0000 ECC 0 6 2 00000000000 0.0MB uncorrected 0000 ECC 0 4 12 00000000000 0.0MB uncorrected 0000 ECC 0 6 13 00000000000 0.0MB uncorrected 0000 ECC 0 8 14 00000000000 0.0MB uncorrected 0000 ECC 0 I replaced *all* the RAM in the box and ran memtest86+ again, and after a few hours I'm getting an error at '00000000000 0.0MB' again, with results similar to the previous run. Is this memory address something 'magical', is it really part of the main system RAM? Can anyone suggest what might be wrong here? Thanks for all comments/suggestions... Dave. -- Please don't CC me on list messages! ... Dave Ewart - [EMAIL PROTECTED] - jabber: [EMAIL PROTECTED] All email from me is now digitally signed, key from http://www.sungate.co.uk/ Fingerprint: AEC5 9360 0A35 7F66 66E9 82E4 9E10 6769 CD28 DA92
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