Tim and I have both experienced this problem. With 2.6.20 things worked perfectly fine on these systems. The two machines are a Dell 1501 Turion X2 and Dell 1521 Turion X2.
With 2.6.22 the kernel hangs shortly after starting up, but after several minutes, you can get activity by tapping keyboard (generating interrupts). We have NO_HZ and HIGH_RES enabled, but even disabling this doesn't help. I've tried every combination of boot param revolving around clocksource and interrupts. The only thing that gets me booting is nolapic, but then again, that knocks me down to a single cpu. Setting maxcpus=1 or nosmp doesn't fix it. We both bisected (separately I might add) down to this commit: commit e9e2cdb412412326c4827fc78ba27f410d837e6e Author: Thomas Gleixner <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Date: Fri Feb 16 01:28:04 2007 -0800 [PATCH] clockevents: i386 drivers Add clockevent drivers for i386: lapic (local) and PIT/HPET (global). Update the timer IRQ to call into the PIT/HPET driver's event handler and the lapic-timer IRQ to call into the lapic clockevent driver. The assignement of timer functionality is delegated to the core framework code and replaces the compile and runtime evalution in do_timer_interrupt_hook() Use the clockevents broadcast support and implement the lapic_broadcast function for ACPI. No changes to existing functionality. Note, the problem doesn't happen when using an x86_64 kernel with the same basic config, on the same machine. Hoping to get some tips to test something a bit more specific in this patch. -- Ubuntu : http://www.ubuntu.com/ Linux1394: http://wiki.linux1394.org/ - To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-kernel" in the body of a message to [EMAIL PROTECTED] More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html Please read the FAQ at http://www.tux.org/lkml/