On Friday 25 November 2005 03:52 pm, Daniel Leidert wrote:
>
> Could you try to make a backtrace [1][2]? I guess we fixed this bug
> already in upstream, but without a backtrace this is hard to validate.
See attached. Let me know if I can provide more info.
...Rob
GNU gdb 6.3.90_20051119-debian
This laptop is working well with Sid except for one, seemingly major, thing.
Whenever there is any heavy disk reading or writing, for example scp'ing a
decent sized file to or from another machine, it slows to a crawl.
As far as I know, it's the original drive for the machine. Aside from
replaci
On Saturday 28 August 2004 05:12 am, Nicolas MASSE wrote:
> Try "hdparm -d1 /dev/hda" and then retry to check the speed of your HD.
> This activate the dma mode for your hard disk. If it doesn't work, maybe
> the module for your ide chipset is not loaded. Check that with "dmesg".
>
> Nicolas.
You
On Monday 27 December 2004 10:05 pm, Tyler Schwend wrote:
> The only thing keeping me from building my own slimmed-down Kernel in
> Debian is that I don't want to have to go through the process every
> time I do an apt-get upgrade and a new kernel is released. Is there
> any Debian-way to automate
This laptop is working well with Sid except for one, seemingly major, thing.
Whenever there is any heavy disk reading or writing, for example scp'ing a
decent sized file to or from another machine, it slows to a crawl.
As far as I know, it's the original drive for the machine. Aside from
replaci
On Saturday 28 August 2004 05:12 am, Nicolas MASSE wrote:
> Try "hdparm -d1 /dev/hda" and then retry to check the speed of your HD.
> This activate the dma mode for your hard disk. If it doesn't work, maybe
> the module for your ide chipset is not loaded. Check that with "dmesg".
>
> Nicolas.
You
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