Re: Too much memory causes crash when reading/writing to disk

Jeff Lessem (Jeff.Lessem@Colorado.EDU)
Thu, 19 Jul 2001 06:36:11 -0600


Andrew Morton wrote:

>Again, spinning in the timer interrupt handler. It does
>appear that the interrupt is not being negated. Try -ac
>and other kernels if/when you can, but it does seem that
>the hardware is unwell.

Ok, this is terribly embarrassing. As soon as you said it looked like
a hardware error, for some reason that made me think of grub, the boot
loader. Sure enough, booting a kernel straight from floppy without
using any bootloader completely avoids the problem. This is the
second time I have been bitten in the ass by grub. (The first time
was on my notebook. After involving Linus in debugging the pci and
yenta drivers, it was discovered that grub was setting up memory
wrong, so the kernel couldn't properly init the cardbus controller.)

So, lessons learned:

grub stable < 0.90.0 does not work on (some?) notebooks
grub stable <= 0.90.0 does not work on Dell 8450s.

I really like the feature set of grub, but I guess the simplicity of
lilo should not be undervalued.

Anyways, I am sorry for wasting your time, and appreciate the help you
have been in debugging this problem. If you ever make it to Oxford,
UK or Boulder, CO, I know a research grant that will buy you a pint
(or more)...

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