From: David Balazic <david.balazic@uni-mb.si>
To: landley@webofficenow.com
Cc: "linux-kernel@vger.kernel.org" <linux-kernel@vger.kernel.org>
Subject: Re: VIA Southbridge bug (Was: Crash on boot (2.4.5))
Date: Tue, 10 Jul 2001 11:12:31 +0200 [thread overview]
Message-ID: <3B4AC6FF.A7363AA2@uni-mb.si> (raw)
Rob Landley (landley@webofficenow.com) wrote :
> On Sunday 08 July 2001 13:37, Alan Cox wrote:
> > > > possible on the memory bus. Several people have reported that machines
> > > > that are otherwise stable on the bios fast options require the proper
> > > > conservative settings to be stable with the Athlon optimisations
> > >
> > > Do we need patch to memtest to use 3dnow?
> >
> > Possibly yes. Although memtest86 really tries to test for onchip not bus
> > related problems
>
> What else tends to fail on the motherboard that might be easy to test for?
> Processor overheating? (When the thermometer circuitry's there, anyway.)
> Something to do with DMA? (Would DMA to/from a common card like VGA catch
> chipset-side DMA problems?) There was an SMP exception thing floating by
> recently, is that common and testable?
>
> I know there's a lot of funky peripheral combinations that behave strangely,
> but without opening that can of worms what kind of common problems on the
> motherboard itself might be easy to test for in a "run this overnight and see
> if it finds a problem with your hardware" sort of way?
>
> Rob
>
> (P.S. What kind of CPU load is most likely to send a processor into overheat?
CPUburn from http://users.ev1.net/~redelm/
My Celeron 300 oc'ed to 450 run RC5 and Mersenne Prime for hours,
but locked up after 5 minutes of CPU burn.
The best CPU ( and bus/memory) test program that exists, IMHO
> (Other than "a tight loop", thanks. I mean what kind of instructions?)
> This is going to be CPU specific, isn't it? Our would a general instruction
> mix that doesn't call halt be enough? It would need to keep the FPU busy
> too, wouldn't it? And maybe handle interrupts. Hmmm...)
>
> I wonder... The torture test Tom's Hardware guide uses for processor
> overheating is GCC compiling the Linux kernel. (That's what caught the
> Pentium III 1.13 gigahertz instability when nothing else would.) I wonder,
> maybe if a stripped down subset of a known version of GCC and a known version
> of the kernel were running from a ramdisk... It USED to fit in 8 megs with
> no swap, might still fit in 32 with a decent chunk of kernel source. Throw
> the compile in a loop, add in a processor temperature detector daemon to kill
> the test and HLT the system if the temperature went too high...
>
> I wonder what bits of the kernel GCC actually needs to run these days?
> (System V inter-process communication? sysctl support? Hmmm... Would
> 2.4.anything be a stable enough base for this yet, or should it be 2.2.19?
> Is 2.4 still psychotic with less swap space than ram (I.E. no swap space at
> all)?)
>
> Off to play...
>
> Still Rob.
--
David Balazic
--------------
"Be excellent to each other." - Bill & Ted
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next reply other threads:[~2001-07-10 9:12 UTC|newest]
Thread overview: 14+ messages / expand[flat|nested] mbox.gz Atom feed top
2001-07-10 9:12 David Balazic [this message]
-- strict thread matches above, loose matches on Subject: below --
2001-06-25 19:57 VIA Southbridge bug (Was: Crash on boot (2.4.5)) Andy Ward
2001-06-25 20:27 ` David Grant
2001-06-26 9:10 ` pazke
2001-06-25 19:55 Andy Ward
2001-06-25 6:17 Crash on boot (2.4.5) Andy Ward
2001-06-25 6:32 ` VIA Southbridge bug (Was: Crash on boot (2.4.5)) Steven Walter
2001-06-25 7:06 ` Alan Cox
2001-06-30 13:58 ` Pavel Machek
2001-07-08 17:37 ` Alan Cox
2001-07-09 16:48 ` Rob Landley
2001-07-10 9:17 ` Ville Herva
2001-07-10 21:24 ` Adam Sampson
2001-07-11 8:32 ` Ville Herva
2001-07-11 9:03 ` Eyal Lebedinsky
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