> From: Noah L. Meyerhans [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] > On Fri, 29 Oct 1999, Ingo Reimann wrote: [...] > > Kernel panic: Freeing swap cache page [...] > Well, the kernel hackers will probably tell me that this is insane and > that it could never possibly make a difference... Destroy and re-create > your swap partitions.
Well, yes, it *could* make a difference. If you had a new bad sector in the swap partition (i.e. a spot that went physically bad on the disk) then you'd need to recreate the swap partition. That could cause the symptoms reported. Next step, use the latest kernel. Bugs are found and fixed all the time, and maybe you have some hardware that triggers a bug. If that doesn't work, check all your hardware. Make sure cables are plugged in right, cards are seated firmly. If you have more than one memory card (SIMM or DIMM or whatever) try using only one at a time, see if the memory's going bad. If all else fails, try slowing down the clock speed of the CPU, then swapping the CPU for a known good one. Etc., etc. Eventually you'll find the problem. Sincerely, Ray Ingles (248) 377-7735 [EMAIL PROTECTED] "If your faith is disturbed by my doubt, perhaps your faith wasn't all that strong to begin with." - Me