On Mon, 28 Apr 2008 22:04:45 +0100, michael wrote: > On Mon, 2008-04-28 at 16:10 +0000, Hendrik Boom wrote: >> About two out of three times I get a kernel panic when booting etch on >> my AMD64 system. It started a few days ago when I upgraded from kernel >> 2.6.18-3-amd64. The rest of the time it comes up normally. >> >> [EMAIL PROTECTED]:~$ uname -a >> Linux april 2.6.18-6-amd64 #1 SMP Sun Feb 10 17:50:19 UTC 2008 x86_64 >> GNU/Linux [EMAIL PROTECTED]:~$ >> >> The messages near the bottom of the screen on kernel panic are (copied >> by hand via a piece of paper): >> >> Code: 83 3f 00 7e f9 e9 d4 fe ff ff f3 90 83 3f 00 7e f9 e9 d3 fe >> Console shuts up... >> <07Kernel panic - not syncing: Aiee, killing interrupt handler >> >> I have nvidia graphics on the motherboard, using the free nv drivers. >> >> Any ideas? What information would be useful? > > At what point does good appear? What appears before? Is there a > /var/log/boot* file with this info in?
It was pretty quick. I suspect it happened before it really got around to mounting file systems, but I'm not sure. There was an extensive backtrace before the kernel panic, but all I get to see is the tail end; the rest is off the screen, and after shutting down interrupts, trying to scroll back doesn't work. Is it worth copying the tail end of the backtrace from the screen? april:/farhome/hendrik# ls /var/log/boot* /var/log/boot april:/farhome/hendrik# cat /var/log/boot* (Nothing has been logged yet.) april:/farhome/hendrik# The problem is intermittent. On a successful boot, does the /var/log/ boot get overwritten? If so, should I try a live CD to get to look at it? Or does it get appended to or rolled over? oooh! What happens if the / partition is full? Can that cause a kernel panic? It happened recently, but as far as I can tell by memory, it became full only after a successful boot, and I have since deleted a lot of space. / contains /ver, /tmp, and all of the usual top-level filesystems except for /usr and /farhome, which are on LVM RAID partitions. / is a reiserfs. /farhome contains most user files. /home is small, and is part of /. -- hendrik -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]