Hi Gilles, Thanks for the info.
However, I can find no mention of oops in kern.log, messages, dmesg etc. I can find nothing obviously wrong with the system. Cheers Russell -----Original Message----- From: Gilles Mocellin [mailto:gilles.mocel...@free.fr] Sent: Wednesday, 29 April 2009 3:11 AM To: debian-user@lists.debian.org Subject: Re: Kernel failure Le Tuesday 28 April 2009 03:55:47 Thamm, Russell, vous avez écrit : > Hi, > > I've just installed lenny under VirtualBox as I wanted to try a > different Linux distribution. > > When I logon to a Gnome session, I often get a popup saying: > > "Your system has had a kernel failure" > > It most often happens the first time I logon using gnome after a boot. > I don't get this if I select a KDE session. It is the package kerneloops. $ aptitude show kerneloops Package: kerneloops [...] Description: kernel oops tracker kerneloops is a daemon that collects kernel crash information and then submits the extracted signature to the kerneloops.org website for statistical analysis and presentation to the Linux kernel developers. > How do I track this down? Look at /var/log/kernel.log You should find some logs and a kernel Ooops ! (an error in the kernel or a module). I think it will not be very informative. I also have this at every boot on my Thinkpad T41 running SID. I think it's related to the wifi chipset having problem with the firmware ipw2100. It is reloaded very often. IMPORTANT: This email remains the property of the Australian Defence Organisation and is subject to the jurisdiction of section 70 of the CRIMES ACT 1914. If you have received this email in error, you are requested to contact the sender and delete the email. -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-user-requ...@lists.debian.org with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact listmas...@lists.debian.org