From owner-freebsd-questions Thu May 9 07:50:40 1996 Return-Path: owner-questions Received: (from root@localhost) by freefall.freebsd.org (8.7.3/8.7.3) id HAA12586 for questions-outgoing; Thu, 9 May 1996 07:50:40 -0700 (PDT) Received: from tombstone.sunrem.com (tombstone.sunrem.com [206.81.134.54]) by freefall.freebsd.org (8.7.3/8.7.3) with SMTP id HAA12580 for ; Thu, 9 May 1996 07:50:37 -0700 (PDT) Received: (from brandon@localhost) by tombstone.sunrem.com (8.6.12/8.6.12) id IAA01696 for questions@freebsd.org; Thu, 9 May 1996 08:50:34 -0600 Date: Thu, 9 May 1996 08:50:34 -0600 From: Brandon Gillespie Message-Id: <199605091450.IAA01696@tombstone.sunrem.com> To: questions@freebsd.org Subject: Finding what caused a crash Sender: owner-questions@freebsd.org X-Loop: FreeBSD.org Precedence: bulk Last night I upgraded the motherboard and CPU of a machine to a Cyrix 6x86 p150+. Everything seemed to have taken fine until I arrived this morning to find the machine completely frozen, requiring a reboot. Is there any way to track what would have caused this? My hardware list is: Cyrix 6x86 p150+ (120mhz) Triton P55TPIO-B Motherboard (256k Burst Cache) 4-4MB simms _without parity_ Everything else is from the original system, which had no problems. I would consider the ram without parity as a problem, except for it has been running in my workstation with FreeBSD for months, without problem... Any help would be appreciated, I would like to know if it would be safer to simply get a different motherboard/CPU.. -Brandon Gillespie