In this BIOS setup there are two "advanced" options:
System Performance Setting [Optimal, Normal]
USB Legacy Support [Auto, Enabled, Disabled]
If the first one is set to "Normal" and the second one to "Disabled"
then the whole system becomes stable. I copied from various file
systems to a directory+on ext2 around 1.2 GB of files without any ill
effects and run succesfully 'diff -r' between two directories 475 MB
each. If BIOS options are any other way then one should expect
spectacular blowups with corrupted file systems and other nasty effects
after the first oops. It survives up to something between 130 to 150
MB of data moved, does not matter which kernel, and that is it.
It is difficult to know what is "System Performance Setting" as it
always shows "Optimal" regardless of a status on the last save. But a
system behaviour depends on how it was set so it seems to change even if
a display, on the next visit, does not. How "USB Legacy Support" comes
into the picture I cannot even imagine.
I did try with 2.2.19pre and 2.4 kernels and the picture does not
change. Any rational explanation beyond that BIOS is doing something
really nasty?
Cheers,
Michal
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