tony mollica wrote: > Hi. Just looking for a little more info. > > Just installed 64megs 168 pin sdram (replacing the 64megs of the usual > type 72 pin edo stuff) in my system and it appears > to be causing file system corruption, as indicated on boot > up by fsck (attempted boot up, actually). Booting from the rescue > disk and running fsck reports lots of problems, fixes them all, but the > problems reappear at the next reboot from the hard disk drive. Also ran > into a problem with programs exiting unexpectedly and core dumping for > no apparent reason. > > Tried my Debian kernels 2.0.30 and 2.0.33 with the same > result and put the original memory back, which seems to > have fixed the problem with either kernel version. > > Has there been any similar reports or other problems using > 168 pin sdram type memory or are there any hardware or kernel > settings that I may have overlooked to make this work? The > memory works ok on 'other' o.s.'s and machines. > > thanks, > -- > tony mollica > [EMAIL PROTECTED]
It may be possible that you SDRAM is damaged. You usually won't notice this on other OS's, because there is a big difference in the RAM-usage. Linux really 'uses' the memory more than on those other 'OS's'. In fact the usage is heavy compared to other OS's. But as Manoj stated - backup your HD - just in case... ;-) Mac -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]