Vladislav Papayan x285 <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Is there a program for Linux (or DOS) that will detect bad memory?
The hwtools packages includes one called "memtest". It doesn't use
any OS, just boots off the first 4K of a floppy.
--
Carey Evans <*> http://home.clear.net.nz/pages/c.
an x285
>Cc:Joost Kooij
>Subject: RE: [Q] Cyrix 6x86L
>
>At 08:34 PM 10/24/97 +0200, Joost Kooij wrote:
>>
>>Hi Al,
>>
>>Thanks, you might well be right. I didn't even think of the heat Cyrix
>>generates and the problems it causes.
>>
&g
On Fri, 24 Oct 1997, Vladislav Papayan x285 wrote:
> Yes. I have a new motherboard as well. It has voltage autodetect,
> 83MHz capable bus (I am running 75mhz bus). It is TX chipset.
> The memory is also new (60ns EDO).
You might also want to try reseating the memories. Sometimes you get a
bet
On Fri, 24 Oct 1997, Vladislav Papayan x285 wrote:
> 83MHz capable bus (I am running 75mhz bus). It is TX chipset.
> The memory is also new (60ns EDO). I also found a utility that
> seems to tune Cyrix processors. It is called set6x86 -- it looks
> very promising as it can tell the processor to
>--
>From: Joost Kooij[SMTP:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>Sent: Friday, October 24, 1997 6:10 AM
>To:Vladislav Papayan x285
>Cc:'Debian User'
>Subject: Re: [Q] Cyrix 6x86L
>
>On Thu, 23 Oct 1997, Vladislav Papayan x285 wrote:
>
>> Hi
On Thu, 23 Oct 1997, Vladislav Papayan x285 wrote:
> Hi
> I just upgraded to the latest unstable (libc6) stuff.
> Including October 18 version of gcc -- now
> every time I try to compile anything I get sig 11
> and interneal compiler error.
sig11 = almost always hardware related memory problems.
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