Could it be that I use only ipv6 as lsmod | grep ip does not show
something like ipv4?
Thanks,
phi
On 2005-08-08 at 13:39:19 +0100, Conall O'Brien wrote:
> On Mon, Aug 08, 2005 at 01:36:36PM IST, Philipp Röthl
> <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> incoherently babbled:
>
> > > What does `lsmod` show? Is it men
> > Yes, lsmod shows the ipv6 module
> >
> > :~# lsmod | grep ipv6
> > ipv6 264740 36
>
> Then you have some other module loading ipv6 as a dependancy...
No, I am not :(
I just restarted the server an ipv6 is still loaded
When I do a modprobe --show-depends on all modules lsmod
On Mon, Aug 08, 2005 at 01:36:36PM IST, Philipp Röthl
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> incoherently babbled:
> > What does `lsmod` show? Is it mentioning the ipv6 module? It it's not
> > there, does "grep CONFIG_IPV6 /boot/config-`uname -r`" releal ipv6 as
> > built in (CONFIG_IPV6=y) or a module (CONFIG_IPV6
> What does `lsmod` show? Is it mentioning the ipv6 module? It it's not
> there, does "grep CONFIG_IPV6 /boot/config-`uname -r`" releal ipv6 as
> built in (CONFIG_IPV6=y) or a module (CONFIG_IPV6=m)
Yes, lsmod shows the ipv6 module
:~# lsmod | grep ipv6
ipv6 264740 36
> Did you
On Mon, Aug 08, 2005 at 11:53:23AM IST, Philipp Röthl
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> incoherently babbled:
> > Either unload the ipv6 module by removing it from /etc/modules or
> > disable IPv6 by editing /etc/modules.conf and uncommenting:
> >
> > alias net-pf-10 off
>
> That is strange: /etc/modules is
> > > Are you using IPv6 at all?
> > Not that I know. I have never configuered my system to use it.
> > I just did a dist-upgrade two weeks ago, and a kernel upgrade yesterday.
>
> What do you see when you do `/sbin/ifconfig | grep inet6`?
:~# ifconfig | grep inet6
inet6 addr: fe80::2e
On Mon, Aug 08, 2005 at 11:20:21AM IST, Philipp Röthl
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> incoherently babbled:
> > Are you using IPv6 at all?
> Not that I know. I have never configuered my system to use it.
> I just did a dist-upgrade two weeks ago, and a kernel upgrade yesterday.
What do you see when you do
Hi Conall,
thanks for your answer.
> Are you using IPv6 at all?
Not that I know. I have never configuered my system to use it.
I just did a dist-upgrade two weeks ago, and a kernel upgrade yesterday.
> I wonder if you have an IPv6 router advertisement daemon (eg radvd on
> Linux or rtadvd on BS
On Sun, Aug 07, 2005 at 10:23:07PM IST, Philipp R�thl
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> incoherently babbled:
Hi Philipp,
> I am currently facing a strange problem on my debian box:
> After 2-6 hours the system is not reachable via ssh and has
> to be resetted.
> The last message I get in /var/log/syslog is..
Hello,
I am currently facing a strange problem on my debian box:
After 2-6 hours the system is not reachable via ssh and has
to be resetted.
The last message I get in /var/log/syslog is...
Aug 7 17:55:11 km1725 kernel: IPv6 addrconf: prefix with wrong length 128
Aug 7 17:55:11 km1725 kernel: IP
On 26 Jul 2004, Carlos Robertson wrote:
[snip]
> Are you overclocking?
>
> Install mprime from "www.mersenne.org/prime.html". Use the test option
> of mprime. Makes a very good hardware tester. Very good for testing the cpu.
>
> Install memtest86+ to check out your memory.
>
> HTH
> Charles
Tim Raats wrote:
Alexandros Papadopoulos wrote:
On Monday 26 July 2004 21:32, Tim Raats wrote:
Debian crashes on the strangest moments. Im running Sarge with kernel
2.4.26. When im surfing the internet with Mozilla Firefox 0.8, Debian
sometimes crashes.
Quick answer: Use a different version
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
On Monday 26 July 2004 23:30, Frederik Dannemare wrote:
> On Monday 26 July 2004 22:49, Tim Raats wrote:
> > Alexandros Papadopoulos wrote:
> > >On Monday 26 July 2004 21:32, Tim Raats wrote:
> > >>Debian crashes on the
> -Original Message-
> From: Alexandros Papadopoulos [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Sent: Monday, July 26, 2004 4:38 PM
> To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Subject: Re: Debian crashes
>
>
> On Monday 26 July 2004 23:49, Tim Raats wrote:
> > Alexandros Papadopoulos wrote:
On Monday 26 July 2004 23:49, Tim Raats wrote:
> Alexandros Papadopoulos wrote:
> >On Monday 26 July 2004 21:32, Tim Raats wrote:
> >>Debian crashes on the strangest moments. Im running Sarge with
> >> kernel 2.4.26. When im surfing the internet with Mozilla Firefox
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
On Monday 26 July 2004 22:49, Tim Raats wrote:
> Alexandros Papadopoulos wrote:
> >On Monday 26 July 2004 21:32, Tim Raats wrote:
> >>Debian crashes on the strangest moments. Im running Sarge with
> >> kernel 2.4.26. When i
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
On Monday 26 July 2004 20:32, Tim Raats wrote:
> Debian crashes on the strangest moments. Im running Sarge with kernel
> 2.4.26. When im surfing the internet with Mozilla Firefox 0.8, Debian
> sometimes crashes. I dont know what the sourc
Alexandros Papadopoulos wrote:
On Monday 26 July 2004 21:32, Tim Raats wrote:
Debian crashes on the strangest moments. Im running Sarge with kernel
2.4.26. When im surfing the internet with Mozilla Firefox 0.8, Debian
sometimes crashes.
Quick answer: Use a different version/build of
On Monday 26 July 2004 21:32, Tim Raats wrote:
> Debian crashes on the strangest moments. Im running Sarge with kernel
> 2.4.26. When im surfing the internet with Mozilla Firefox 0.8, Debian
> sometimes crashes.
Quick answer: Use a different version/build of Firefox.
Now, are you
Debian crashes on the strangest moments. Im running Sarge with kernel
2.4.26. When im surfing the internet with Mozilla Firefox 0.8, Debian
sometimes crashes. I dont know what the source of this problem is. Im
running KDE 3.2.3 also. Please I need help because if I want crashes
than I should
On Fri, 22 Nov 2002 08:51, Benedict Verheyen wrote:
> > most likely there is a hardware problem. Linux doesn't just shutdown
> > without a reason :)
>
> Yep, my "workmachine" has 2 debian's and a win os running and i never
> had problems with my debian systems before.
>
> > win98 is a piece of shit
hi,
I ran a test on the memory with mem386 and it doesn't look good at all.
I'm not saying this is the sole reason of the crashes but it might be a big
factor in the whole process.
This is the output ( test was still running) of what i received on screen:
1. wall time: 2:02:12
2. cached: 160 M
3.
Benedict Verheyen said:
> Sometime it doesn't. It just shuts down as if you would unplug the power.
this is an indication of a SEVERE hardware problem. Possibly bad
cpu, bad ram, bad motherboard.
whatever it is though, it sounds to be at the core of the system and
not the fault of some driver or
On Thu, Nov 21, 2002 at 12:05:12PM +, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
...
> Any other stuff i can try out? If not, what distro would be good for
> a server install? Slackware? Red hat? Suse?
1) In stall multiple Linuxes.
2) Run Debian without X
3) Run debian as chroot from X-less Suse.
4) Run Suse a
> most likely there is a hardware problem. Linux doesn't just shutdown
> without a reason :)
Yep, my "workmachine" has 2 debian's and a win os running and i never
had problems with my debian systems before.
> win98 is a piece of shit OS, and doesn't stress the hardware nearly
> as much as a linux
[EMAIL PROTECTED] said:
> could startup my pc and experience the crash while booting. Indeed they
> saw the same. They checked everything and said that my hardware is just
> fine.
most likely there is a hardware problem. Linux doesn't just shutdown
without a reason :)
> Then they installed win9
Hi,
i recently posted on this list regarding random shutdowns of my debian woody server. I
tried nearly everything: reinstalling, changing harddisks, removing scsi controller,
removing isa soundblaster, changing powersupply and so on.
I was getting fed up and borught it back to the computer stor
My server crashes every week.
error messages is :
VM: read_swap_page: page already in page cache
kernel panic: Freeing swap cache page
It is bad block in swap area ? or other ? Best regards.
Alexey P. Ivanov
[ Adm ]
"Alexey P. Ivanov" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> > During my usage of Debian I rarely had any problems with it at home,
> > but after getting it into production server at work crashes became
> > quite often (once per month - for sure). And it crashes randomly, at no
> > particular task, not at hig
>
> Hi ppl
>
> During my usage of Debian I rarely had any problems with it at home,
> but after getting it into production server at work crashes became
> quite often (once per month - for sure). And it crashes randomly, at no
> particular task, not at high load, just when it wants.
> Without any
>> On Mon, Oct 23, 2000 at 08:57:59AM +0200, Jean Orloff wrote:
>> > I have happily used debian since 1995 (0.93R6 if I recall?). But
>> > since I installed 2.1 on my new PC at work, about a year ago, that
>> > machine undergoes about a crash per month in average. Nothing to
>> > scare a windblows
Björn Elwhagen <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Please check the mailing list archives. If i don't remember wrong
> i've heard about a package that breaks after a certain time, a bug
> that is resolved now. I don't remember which package it was but you
> could at least try to find something about it.
HELO,
Please check the mailing list archives. If i don't remember wrong i've
heard about a package that breaks after a certain time, a bug that is
resolved now. I don't remember which package it was but you could at
least try to find something about it.
I know this reply is very vague but maybe i
on Mon, Oct 23, 2000 at 08:57:59AM +0200, Jean Orloff ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote:
> Hello, dear debian fellows!
>
> Please forgive my paranoid anonymity, in view of the last section of
> this message.
>
> 1) My problem:
>
> I have happily used debian since 1995 (0.93R6 if I recall?). But since I
Hello, dear debian fellows!
Please forgive my paranoid anonymity, in view of the last section of
this message.
1) My problem:
I have happily used debian since 1995 (0.93R6 if I recall?). But since I
installed 2.1 on my new PC at work, about a year ago, that machine
undergoes about a crash per mo
Ian Stuart <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> ** Root partition can be a bit dodgy for a File System ChecK - it can go
> pearshaped if too much is screwed **
Chris writes:
>Pearshaped? -chris
British (slang?) for a situation going wrong/bad.
I knew that watching the Bill[1] religiously would come
Title: RE: What if Debian crashes?
Hey you can send that Pear Shaped File System Chick my direction...oh whoops file system DOH!
:-)
Andrew
> -Original Message-
> From: Krzys Majewski [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
> Sent: Thursday, October 19, 2000 4:59 PM
> To:
Ian Stuart <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> ** Root partition can be a bit dodgy for a File System ChecK - it can go
> pearshaped if too much is screwed **
Pearshaped? -chris
Andreas Palsson wrote:
> Until now I have never experienced a crash, freeze, system-/disk-fault in
> 3 years. I might be lucky, but I never experiment with unstable or
> 'frozen' distributions or applications.
>
> What tools are there to check the system/disks/ram/installed packages?
The disks wil
>
> What is good/bad to backup (tar+gz) on a Debian-system (etc|var|usr...)?
>
you want a copy of /etc and /home for sure. /usr/local if you use it, same
with /opt. /var is probably ignoarable, unless you need logs.
dpkg --get-selections > mypackages, will write all of the packages you have
i
Hello.
Here's a question which might be a little stupid, what do I do if Debian
crashes?
Until now I have never experienced a crash, freeze, system-/disk-fault in
3 years. I might be lucky, but I never experiment with unstable or
'frozen' distributions or applications.
What too
Michiel Meeuwissen wrote:
>
> Ragga Muffin <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrotes:
> > Daniel Reuter <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > > On Fri, 2 Jun 2000, Michiel Meeuwissen wrote:
> > > > It seems that a way to accomplish this is running apt-get upgrade,
> > > > netsape and seti at the same time, in my comput
Ragga Muffin <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrotes:
> Daniel Reuter <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > On Fri, 2 Jun 2000, Michiel Meeuwissen wrote:
> > > It seems that a way to accomplish this is running apt-get upgrade,
> > > netsape and seti at the same time, in my computer (potato, PIII 500 64
> > > Mb).
> >
Daniel Reuter <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hello Michiel,
>
> On Fri, 2 Jun 2000, Michiel Meeuwissen wrote:
>
> > It seems that a way to accomplish this is running apt-get upgrade,
> > netsape and seti at the same time, in my computer (potato, PIII 500 64
> > Mb).
>
> On Netscape's webpage they
Hello Michiel,
On Fri, 2 Jun 2000, Michiel Meeuwissen wrote:
> It seems that a way to accomplish this is running apt-get upgrade,
> netsape and seti at the same time, in my computer (potato, PIII 500 64
> Mb).
On Netscape's webpage they strongly recommend at least 64 Mb of RAM for
use of Netscap
On 02-Jun-2000 Michiel Meeuwissen wrote:
>
> Already several times happened to me the following:
> When I use a few memory eating programs like Netscape and dselect
> together, by whole computer freezes for a long time (10 minutes or so)
> and I don't see another way out then simply turning it o
Already several times happened to me the following:
When I use a few memory eating programs like Netscape and dselect
together, by whole computer freezes for a long time (10 minutes or so)
and I don't see another way out then simply turning it of, because
then I at least know what happens, and ho
47 matches
Mail list logo