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Date:      Tue, 9 Nov 1999 11:34:59 +0000 (GMT)
From:      Mark Powell <M.S.Powell@salford.ac.uk>
To:        freebsd-questions@freebsd.org
Subject:   Stress testing a machine with "make world"
Message-ID:  <Pine.BSF.4.05.9911091127380.20614-100000@localhost>

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We all know "make world" is a good acid test of whether a machine has
decent motherboard, RAM and disk subsystem. However, how far does one go?
And what is a good stress test of a machine with lots of RAM?
  I've had a machine forced upon me, which is based on a Micro-Star 6119
motherboard. Never heard of them before, so I decided to test it out.
  Handles a 3.3R "make world" fine, but will panic the kernel on a
"make -j60 world".

-----
IdlePTD 2711552
initial pcb at 2310b8
panicstr: page fault
panic messages:
---
Fatal trap 12: page fault while in kernel mode
fault virtual address   = 0x29a
fault code              = supervisor read, page not present
instruction pointer     = 0x8:0xc0174bef
stack pointer           = 0x10:0xc78b5f30
frame pointer           = 0x10:0xc7be8174
code segment            = base 0x0, limit 0xfffff, type 0x1b
                        = DPL 0, pres 1, def32 1, gran 1
processor eflags        = interrupt enabled, resume, IOPL = 0
current process         = 2 (pagedaemon)
interrupt mask          = 
trap number             = 12
panic: page fault

syncing disks... 133 133 133 119 93 45 7 1 done

....

---
#0  boot (howto=Cannot access memory at address 0x20.
) at ../../kern/kern_shutdown.c:285
285                     dumppcb.pcb_cr3 = rcr3();
---

These sort of errors are bad hardware?
  This always happens when the machine has 128MB of RAM. If the RAM is
increased to 256MB, I can't get the "make world" to fail, even putting the
number of concurrent jobs up into the hundreds. I presume this is due to
it swapping less and not encountering the problems with the hardware? How
can one test such a machine without resorting to a "make -j100 world" on
each and even DIMM in turn?
Cheers.

Mark Powell - UNIX System Administrator - Clifford Whitworth Building
A.I.S., University of Salford, Salford, Manchester, UK.
Tel: +44 161 295 5936  Fax: +44 161 295 5888  www.pgp.com for PGP key
M.S.Powell@ais.salfrd.ac.uk (spell salford correctly to reply to me)



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