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Re: Freezing mouse and other suff



On 7/9/23 12:26, Maureen L Thomas wrote:
On 7/9/23 12:37 AM, David Christensen wrote:
On 7/8/23 20:13, Maureen L Thomas wrote:
So I have the latest stable Debian installed on my Lenova all in one computer.  I have an 8gb seagate ATA  harddrive,


8 GB seems small.  Do you mean 8 TB?

No it is a one year old mahine and it has 2 gigabytes as does my back up dish which is Toshiba 2 GB drive.

On 7/9/23 12:45, Maureen L Thomas wrote:
> I stand corrected my hdd is 1 terabyte and the ram is 8gb.  I am not
> sure I can expand that but I will find out.


8 GB of memory and a 1 TB hard disk drive should be enough for typical desktop usage.


On 7/8/23 20:13, Maureen L Thomas wrote:
Inetl core i3-9100T CPU 310 GHz, Realtec 8821CE wireless lan 802.1ac PCI-E Nic.

When I shutdown I get the following message:  stop job is run for Clam Antivirus userspace daian   /1min40S  and them failed unmount /var.


Have you installed any software via any means other than a Debian package management tool such as apt-get(8)?

No only thur the apt-get system.


Okay.


When I boot up 1.290210] mce:[Hardware Error[:  CPU 0:  Machine Check: 0 Bank 9: ae0000000036

1,290283] mce: [Hardware Error]: TSC 0 ADDR 8d387240 MISC 7040000086 and then

1.290354] mce: [Hardware error]: Processor 0:906eb TIME 1688865217 Socket 0 C O microcode f0


Also my system freezes, I thought it was just the mouse but it is the whole system.  It usually happens when I have more than four windows open or after I play music.  I have absolutely no idea what is going on.  Your help would be greatly appreciated. Thank you.

Have you been keeping system administration records and have you been creating archives, images, and backups as I previously suggested?

https://lists.debian.org/debian-user/2023/05/msg00714.html

I have saved all my files on a second HD and the log files in a file I created for them. I looked at the one you suggested but could not figure it out.


Keeping system administration notes is a good practice.  Keep it up.


So long as you have backups by any means, that is good. Learning a packaged backup system can be a long-range goal.


Similarly, images via dd(1) and/or a package such as Clonezilla can be a long-range goal. In the mean time, the alternative is re-installing.


Failing power supplies can be maddening to troubleshoot. The way to find out is to use a hardware power supply tester. I bought an inexpensive Antec ATX12V tester years ago; there are several newer models to choose from.


Another reader suggested that the problems may be caused by memory errors. The way to find out is to download memtest86+, burn it to bootable media, and run it:

https://memtest.org/


Your computer may have a UEFI built-in self-test suite.  If so, run it.


David


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