-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- On Fri, 29 Oct 1999, Ingo Reimann wrote:
> Kernel panic: Freeing swap cache page > > kern.log says: > > Oct 29 11:03:01 convert kernel: VM: read_swap_page: page already in page > cache! > Oct 29 11:03:01 convert kernel: Kernel panic: Freeing swap cache page > > What does this mean? What can i do? Well, the kernel hackers will probably tell me that this is insane and that it could never possibly make a difference, but I swear it worked for me before when I had similar problems! Destroy and re-create your swap partitions. Remember to run swapoff on them before you delete them. Maybe you don't actually need to delete the partitions; mkswap might be enough. But anyway, re-create the swap partition and run swapon...see what happens. I can't imagine why it would work. I don't think it should. But a couple years ago I ran into major stability problems and got similar messages to when you found in kern.log. Re-creating the swap partition fixed everything. I have no idea what inspired me to try that, but... HTH, noah PGP Public Key available at http://www.morgul.net/~frodo/mail.html or by `finger -l [EMAIL PROTECTED] -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: 2.6.3a Charset: noconv iQCVAwUBOBmbQodCcpBjGWoFAQFpngQAj0P3QAR8yNPCTKqlcBhmdaOadPe4I+3J BHOxsWlAGSXlXc5oAy8Mggb/+BisXb713YiBRSwGieZlyPLogzjINLRVJjeXpz/u vIyvT6iVqZWCArrS692taKWs0WMpsijcZrLkXU7eUultqJTrYjqGaDK8aJfVYm7o DmWpwZNlBWY= =zPwS -----END PGP SIGNATURE-----