Date: Tue, 4 Nov 2008 05:57:22 -0600 From: linimon@lonesome.com (Mark Linimon) To: Marius Strobl <marius@alchemy.franken.de> Cc: Mark Linimon <linimon@lonesome.com>, freebsd-sparc64@freebsd.org Subject: Re: Free Ultra2 in Silicon Valley, USA Message-ID: <20081104115722.GA28394@soaustin.net> In-Reply-To: <20081103223042.GB8256@alchemy.franken.de> References: <20081031124442.GB9102@soaustin.net> <183638.12752.qm@web56802.mail.re3.yahoo.com> <20081031131827.GA9613@soaustin.net> <20081103223042.GB8256@alchemy.franken.de>
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On Mon, Nov 03, 2008 at 11:30:42PM +0100, Marius Strobl wrote: > Anyway, the panic message provided isn't enough info to even > guess what the real cause is. I think I have more notes at home (not accessible ATM). > I think the easiest way to proceed would be to remove the remaining > NIC (is there a reason you disabled gem(4) for the on-board ones?) The kernels that we run are pretty lean; it's possible that that driver is not included. Or, are you talking about something in the hardware setup? > and mass storage controller drivers one by one and see when the > panic goes away. Is this something that can be done remotely? I'm a thousand miles away from the machines :-) > That said, my T1 AC200 is running fine and I've never seen such a > problem with it... These things have an add-in card with 4 more ethernet slots IIRC; could the difference in configuration explain things? mcl
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