[Date Prev][Date Next] [Thread Prev][Thread Next] [Date Index] [Thread Index]

Re: Linux freezing up



On 03-Aug-99 Patrik Magnusson wrote:
> In article <[🔎] 000901bedd8c$0f007240$2a64fd91@arcor>,
>       sh@arcormail.de (Stephan Hachinger) writes:
>> ----- Original Message -----
>> From: Wim Kerkhoff <wim@netmaster.ca>
>> Sent: Tuesday, August 03, 1999 2:21 AM
>> 
>>> Hello,
>>>
>>> I have on several occasions experienced a lockup of my system.  For no
>>> apparent reason, it will freeze up.  It will not respond to any keyboard
>>> control:  Ctrl-Alt-Backspace doesn't kill X, Ctrl-c, Ctrl-z, Ctrl-Alt-Del
>>> don't do anything.  Caps lock, etc don't toggle the keyboard lights either.
>>>
>>> What I did find kind of strange, though, it was still connected to my ISP
>>> via modem, and masquarading for the rest of the network.  
>>> I could ping it from a win95 box, and 'see' the Internet through it.  
>>> I couldn't telnet/ftp into it though, only ping and masq.
>>> I had an uptime of 12 days when this happened.   It has done it before.
>>> Where would the problem lie?  Hardware? Kernel?
> 
> With the exception of being perfectly able to telnet/ftp I've had
> the exact same problem myself. It turned out that it was 'just' my
> Xserver crashing. So I'm going to ask a potentially stupid question 
> just to make sure: You can telnet/ftp into it under normal conditions
> right?

Yep, no problems before, or now after rebooting.  From the Windows box, I
telneted to a shell account at my ISP, and from there I could ping
wim.dhis.org, a hostname for my dynamic IP.  So... ping is working, and the
kernel is still working fine, because it is forwarding IP's properly.

The "three-fingered salute" mentioned by someone else did not work.  Basically,
the keyboard/mouse were dead.

Before this motherboard, I had an Asus P5A with an intel 740 AGP Real 3d
starfighter, and that was continually locking up, even in Windows 98.  

I am not overclocking, just running at normal board speed of 100mhz x 3.5.  I
have a fan on the cpu, and a power supply fan.  Do I need another case fan?

I was using the netscape, just html pages.

> 
> [snip] 
>> Sounds like a processor overheat problem or so, I think. But it's quite
>> strange that you could ping it. Isn't the processor needed for beeing
>> pinged??
> 
> Yes, I thought so too.

I am running the seti@home stuff fulltime.  I was gone for a week, and a couple
of those running, but there were not problems when I got back.

>  
>> Kind Regards, Stephan Hachinger.
>> 
>> 
> /Patrik.



---------------------------
 Wim Kerkhoff              
 wim@netmaster.ca
 www.canadianhomes.net/wim 
 ICQ: 23284586


Reply to: