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Date:      Fri, 21 May 2004 13:51:02 -0700
From:      Gary Kline <kline@thought.org>
To:        Gary Kline <kline@thought.org>, FreeBSD Mailing List <freebsd-questions@FreeBSD.ORG>
Subject:   Re: relatively urgent question (about X)
Message-ID:  <20040521205102.GC34378@tao.thought.org>
In-Reply-To: <20040521204058.GK21801@gentoo-npk.bmp.ub>
References:  <20040521175046.GA557@tao.thought.org> <20040521204058.GK21801@gentoo-npk.bmp.ub>

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On Fri, May 21, 2004 at 02:40:58PM -0600, Nathan Kinkade wrote:
> On Fri, May 21, 2004 at 10:50:46AM -0700, Gary Kline wrote:
> > 	For some months I've had increasing troubles with my 
> > 	4.9/4.10 abruptly crashing.  This morning I found my
> > 	workhorse server, tao, down and hung up while trying to
> > 	fsck /usr.  I cleaned everything thoroughly and then
> > 	started xdm.  The grey screen showed, the mouse was frozen;
> > 	after 30 seconds, BOOM.  Another crash.  After yet 
> > 	another round of fsck's, I tried startx.  To see what 
> > 	errs might kill the X11 boot.  No: same blank grey screen,
> > 	same frozen mouse,same OS crash.
> > 
> > 	I tried /stand/sysinstall to reconfigure X.  No luck.
> > 	I'm now doing my next stable sup upgrade and am doing
> > 	yet another buildworld  && buildkernel.
> > 
> > 	I doubt this will resolve the X Window snafu, tho.  So:::
> > 	what x11/*XFree* ports do I have to fetch/build/install??
> > 	((I'm assuming the reason for the crash was X-related,
> > 	but this is only a first-SWAG.) Also, if anybody has had a 
> > 	similar problem, please let me know.
> > 
> > 	tia, people,
> > 
> > 	gary, ssh'd in from ethic.thought.org
> 
> Could this be a hardware issue?  All other things being mostly constant
> I wouldn't think that software usually all of a sudden goes bad or gets
> misconfigured.  Possibly it got corrupted on the disk for some reason,
> but then I might wonder what caused the disk to get corrupted in the
> first place.  How about trying a new video card and/or peripherals?
> This is assuming that your setup was working one day and then the next
> went bad, or if it is flaky and intermittent.
> 
> Nathan


	Yes, it certainly could be a bad disc or even bad DIMM.
	I'm running an i815 motherboard that had video/audio
	built in.  But the drive may have gotten kicked or bumped.
	How can I test a 40G drive??

	gary




-- 
   Gary Kline     kline@thought.org   www.thought.org     Public service Unix



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