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Date:      Wed, 06 Oct 2004 19:58:12 +0400
From:      Maxim Maximov <mcsi@mcsi.pp.ru>
To:        Brian Fundakowski Feldman <green@freebsd.org>
Cc:        current@freebsd.org
Subject:   Re: NDIS/UMA related panic
Message-ID:  <41641614.3050102@mcsi.pp.ru>
In-Reply-To: <20041006155125.GK47017@green.homeunix.org>
References:  <41640976.7020004@mcsi.pp.ru> <20041006155125.GK47017@green.homeunix.org>

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Brian Fundakowski Feldman wrote:
> On Wed, Oct 06, 2004 at 07:04:22PM +0400, Maxim Maximov wrote:
> 
>>Hello.
>>
>>	System running kernel
>>
>>FreeBSD ultra.domain 6.0-CURRENT FreeBSD 6.0-CURRENT #11: Fri Oct  1 
>>19:17:59 MSD 2004     mcsi@ultra.domain:/usr/obj/usr/src/sys/ULTRA  i386
>>
>>	is sometimes experiencing following panic on boot after ppp starts 
>>	and sends first packet to ndis0 (hand-transcribed):
>>
>>kernel trap 12: page fault
>>db> trace
>>ntoskrnl_queue_dpc(0xdeadc0de, 0, 0, 0, 0xd6b96330) +0x9
>>ntoskrnl_timercall(0xc1fb51f0) +0x7a
>>softclock(0) +0x17a
>>ithread_loop
>>fork_exit
>>fork_trampoline
>>
>>	I'll update kernel and will re-post if the problem continues. I'm 
>>posting this now because I think someone might be interested in seeing 
>>0xdeadc0de in stack trace.
> 
> 
> That very much looks like an NDIS driver bug.  Did the vendor only provide
> one version to try?

Yes. This is ASUS L5G notebook. Driver page with the one and only 
Wireless driver is here: 
http://www.asus.com/support/download/item.aspx?ModelName=L5G

I'm running NDIS for about 1.5 months. And this panic first happens only 
yesterday, so I thought this is not the driver bug. BTW, here it is:

ndis0: <ASUS 802.11g Network Adapter> mem 0xfeaf8000-0xfeaf9fff irq 17 
at device 2.0 on pci2
ndis0: NDIS API version: 5.0
ndis0: Ethernet address: 00:0e:a6:c2:00:e4
ndis0: 11b rates: 1Mbps 2Mbps 5.5Mbps 11Mbps
ndis0: 11g rates: 6Mbps 9Mbps 12Mbps 18Mbps 36Mbps 48Mbps 54Mbps

Full dmesg is at http://mcsi.pp.ru/dmesg.boot

>  I wouldn't be surprised if NT has kernel code that
> specifically tries to recover from timers going off that were stored in
> memory that got freed (before they went off).
> 


-- 
Maxim Maximov



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