Re: VIA VT82C686X

Stephen Wille Padnos (stephenwp@adelphia.net)
Wed, 31 Jan 2001 12:13:21 -0500


Byron Stanoszek wrote:

> On Tue, 30 Jan 2001, David D.W. Downey wrote:
>
> > I removed the ide and ata setting. System is running stably as in no
> > kernel crashes, but I am getting daemon and shell crashes. With this
> > current kernel I've had 1 kernel crash in about 3 hours as compared to 1
> > every 10 or 15 minutes. Crash, reboot, 10 minutes or so crash, reboot. ect
> > ect.
> >
> > I'm wanting to test something else out. I'm wondering if there isn't some
> > hardware issue with the RAM. This particular board will do 1GB of PC133,
> > or 2.5GB of PC100. I'm wondering if there isn't something wrong with how
> > it reads the speed and the appropriate limitation. It's running stably if
> > I only run 768MB of PC133 RAM. But if I run a solid 1GB of PC133 I get
> > segfaults and sig11 crashes constantly. All the RAM has been
> > professionally tested and certified.
>
> That definitely sounds like a RAM problem. The system should perform the same
> independent of how many RAM chips you put in there (segfault-wise). If you're
> still in doubt, you can try booting up with memtest86 and run it for several
> hours with only the memory chip that you think might be causing the problem.
>

Even though the motherboard *should* perform the same regardless of the amount
of RAM, it may not. Physically, the refresh needs higher current drive when
there are more modules. I have seen a BIOS option to set the DRAM refresh
current (RAS, CAS settable to 10 or 16 mA each), but that was only on one
motherboard that I can remember - you might want to check for this.

-
To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-kernel" in
the body of a message to majordomo@vger.kernel.org
Please read the FAQ at http://www.tux.org/lkml/