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Date:      Mon, 28 Sep 1998 08:52:26 -0500 (CDT)
From:      David Kelly <dkelly@mail.HiWAAY.net>
To:        clash@tasam.com, freebsd-hardware@FreeBSD.ORG
Subject:   Re:  Server Stability not good anymore
Message-ID:  <199809281352.IAA21493@mail.HiWAAY.net>

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"Joe Gleason" <clash@tasam.com> writes:
> 
> I am a madman that runs a shell server.  The server was running just fine
> untill a few days ago when I upgraded some hardware.  Now it randomly
> reboots every 20 or so hours, which is very bad for me.  Does anyone know
> where I should start in finding the problem?
> 
> I was running:
> A PII 233mhz with 512mb of Ram on a Tyan S1832DL with FreeBSD 2.2.6.
> I ran in this configuration with 4 128mb dimms at one time and 2 128mb dimms
> and 1 256mb dimm on anouther occasion with no problems.  In both cases the
> stability was great.

Parity/ECC memory? If you had parity memory you should get a nice crash
informing you of the bad memory. If you have ECC turned on on the MB
then the system should run thru most memory errors. Not sure if FreeBSD
logs a message about corrected memory problems.

There is no excuse for not using parity and/or ECC in critical
applications.

Only 30MB swapped out on 512M system? So? I run about that quite
often on a single user (me) system:
PeeCee: {237} swapinfo
Device      1K-blocks     Used    Avail Capacity  Type
/dev/wd0s1b     32768    10532    22172    32%    Interleaved
/dev/sd0s1b     59384    10948    48372    18%    Interleaved
Total           92024    21480    70544    23%
PeeCee: {238} 

The above poor machine only has 24MB of core.

--
David Kelly N4HHE, dkelly@hiwaay.net (hm)
======================================================================
The human mind ordinarily operates at only ten percent of its
capacity -- the rest is overhead for the operating system.

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