On Thu, Mar 26, 2009 at 12:10 AM, JDahl wrote:
> Do you mean that it is fixed in the updates for Ubuntu 8.10?
No, Steve just means that it was addressed in the release notes so that
specific task for the release notes is done.
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iwlagn causes kernel panic on 802.11n wifi
https://bugs.launchpa
He only closed the release notes task.
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iwlagn causes kernel panic on 802.11n wifi
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/276990
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Do you mean that it is fixed in the updates for Ubuntu 8.10? I still
experience frequent crashes
after installing all the proposed kernel updates for 8.10.
Steve Langasek skrev:
> This issue was documented in the 8.10 release notes; closing this task.
>
> ** Changed in: ubuntu-release-notes
>
On Wed, Jan 28, 2009 at 5:41 PM, James Ward wrote:
> Sorry to not be clear. My kernel panics happen when my iwlagn is on and
> connected to an AP.
>
I think your language "killswitch is off" was confusing some people :) I
assume by that you meant the killswitch was not enabled, ie the wireless w
Is your AP using 802.11n or 802.11g or mixed mode oryou get the
picture?
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iwlagn causes kernel panic on 802.11n wifi
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/276990
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Are you or are you not associated to an 802.11n network? Your
description sounds like you are *not* online, so while the same module
may be to blame, it would be a different bug than one that occurs only
when using 802.11n to get online.
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iwlagn causes kernel panic on 802.11n wifi
https://bugs
James:
The kernel panics that happen when the killswitch is disabled (so
networking is enabled) and 802.11n is in use have stopped. Your kernel
panics, which you say occur when networking is disabled in hardware are
something new.
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iwlagn causes kernel panic on 802.11n wifi
https://bugs.launch
On Thu, Jan 29, 2009 at 01:10:14AM -, James Ward wrote:
> Doesn't "fixed" usually mean the kernel panics have stopped? :)
Yes, but it's not altogether clear that your panics are the same as the ones
in this bug. You mention booting with the killswitch off, whereas this bug
is about a panic w
Steve Langasek wrote:
> I'm sorry, does that mean the bug is fixed in jaunty or that it isn't?
> I'm not a kernel developer, I don't have a local git checkout of the
> linux tree, and I don't see an easy way to go from a commit ID to an
> answer "what kernel release is this change included in" with
Steve Langasek wrote:
> Tim, is this bug fixed in the jaunty kernel? It's been marked 'fix
> committed' for over two months now.
>
http://git.kernel.org/?p=linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux-2.6.git;a=commit;h=55d6a3cd0cc85ed90c39cf32e16f622bd003117b
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iwlagn causes kernel panic on 802.11n wifi
I can confirm that -10 kernel seems to fix the kernel panics. I was able
to work for over 10 hours so far without a single crash. So far so good.
On a side note, did anyone manage to get a good speed out of 802.11n?
The output of iwconfig shows up to 60mbit/s even though I am sitting
next to wifi
Kernel -10 seems to have fixed it on my laptop.. no more crashes :)
On Tue, Dec 2, 2008 at 3:57 PM, sorenjensen <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> After reading about firmware update (Posted 28/11) I have tried
> different setups for some days now:
>
> Out with backports and proposed, upgrade to -9 Ke
On Tue, Dec 02, 2008 at 12:06:01AM -, junior wrote:
> I installed the interpid-proposed patch and never had kernel panics
> after that. BUT after the latest kernel upgrade (the -9 I guess) I've
> gotten many of them! I guess it's this bug that suddenly is reoccuring.
> Is there any action requi
On Mon, Dec 01, 2008 at 07:39:23AM -, Mo wrote:
> On Thinkpad T61 I had no problems with the proposed 2.6.27-8 kernel.
> With the 2.6.27-9 kernel the kernel panics are back!
The 2.6.27-9 kernel was a security update kernel and based on the
officially released version 2.6.27-7 (from the updates
The kernel panic also happen using the latest firmware with 2.6.27-7 on amd64.
Will now try 2.6.27-8 from backports.
--Original Message--
From: Robb Topolski
Sender: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
ReplyTo: Bug 276990
Subject: [Bug 276990] Re: iwlagn causes kernel panic on 802.11n
I've tried the latest firmware release from the earlier post and I can confirm
that the kernel panic still happens with heavy use of network (torrent at about
600kb of download). I am using the latest amd64 kernel 2.6.27-9.
--Original Message--
From: junior
Sender: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To:
On Wed, Nov 26, 2008 at 6:27 PM, Mozg <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I'll check the latest module and report shortly. This is driving me
> insane and I think it is very lame for ubuntu team not to test the
> modules before releasing 8.10! It is not like there is only one 802.11n
> router on the marke
I'll check the latest module and report shortly. This is driving me
insane and I think it is very lame for ubuntu team not to test the
modules before releasing 8.10! It is not like there is only one 802.11n
router on the market and Intel wifi cards are very scarce.
Andrei
--Original Message--
jems wrote:
> I confirm things written here. I got a laptop with an intel 4965, and
> the latest 8.10 makes it freeze just after a few minutes.
>
> I have tried 3 things from this thread :
> - 11n_disable : I couldn't see any wireless networks around me, "no scan
> results"
> - lbm : kept crashin
Christophe Dumez wrote:
> Yes. I confirm that I did not have any kernel panic on Hardy with hardy
> kernel. Then, when I upgraded to Intrepid, I started to experience
> kernel panics. Thus, I tried to use Hardy kernel on intrepid but I
> experienced kernel panics anyway. This is odd but true.
>
Th
I confirm that module from comment 85 works for me.
2008/11/2 Christophe Dumez <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
> Yes. I confirm that I did not have any kernel panic on Hardy with hardy
> kernel. Then, when I upgraded to Intrepid, I started to experience
> kernel panics. Thus, I tried to use Hardy kernel on i
Thanks, these are exactly the cases where the iwlagn module shipped with
the ubuntu kernel would have crashed the kernel.
Christophe Dumez wrote:
> I have a lot of "wrong command queue 31, command id 0x0" in my logs.
> Apparently, this is due to the patch above.
>
>
> ** Attachment added: "kern.
On Fri, 2008-10-31 at 00:43 +, Zizzle wrote:
> Sometimes the laptop is unusable. Can't event load firefox without the
> lockup happening. Other times it will run for hours. Something must be
> sending the packet or packet rate of death.
Have you tried sniffing ingoing and outgoing packets? Tha
On Sat, Oct 25, 2008 at 11:37 PM, syko21 <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> To get backports the person must use their wireless card to download the
> package
You definitely have a point but it is not necessarily a MUST, as wired
ethernet can download it, or the package can be put on removable
media. I
On Fri, Oct 24, 2008 at 09:43:44PM -, Tom Jaeger wrote:
> If it's really not possible to backport the newer version of the driver,
> wouldn't it be a better idea to disable the broken driver altogether?
No, that wouldn't be better; for some users this may make it impossible (or
nearly so) to d
On Mon, 2008-10-13 at 15:45 +, junior wrote:
> How do I install the backported modules? I have added the backport repo,
> but what's the package I need? I'm eager to get the wifi working
I don't think you need the backports repo to get linux-backports-modules
That should be in Main.
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iwlag
Kernel panics will generally dump _something_ to the (real) terminal.
The way to try and grab this would be to switch to a VT (with ctrl+alt
+F1) and wait for the kernel to die, then take a photo.
I seem to recall something about there being work to enable panics to be
visible while in X, but can'
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