Am 26.05.2014 17:10, schrieb Bruno Friedmann:
On Monday 26 May 2014 13.39:43 Stefan Seyfried wrote:
Am 26.05.2014 11:33, schrieb Bruno Friedmann:
Some binaries normally ELF became data file. (Was the case of dos2unix) which I don't run from months. rpm -Va show others like this .5.... just the md5sum has changed...
I had seen similar things on my "server" at home. No SSD involved at that time, only HDDs.
Exchanging the RAM sticks solved the issue apparently (even though memtest86 did not find any errors).
I've think about that too. but I can't explain how a binary correctly written during install and never touch since (yeah I know why having it then ;-)) could be changed by a bad ram ? The binary have been read several time by backup software and this one also tell me that between last week-end something happen to that binary.
Did you reboot since then? Maybe a reboot makes the modification go away => bad RAM. For me it was only single bit flips ("!" changed to "#" in C source files, amongst others). If you have backups of the good and the bad version, then try comparing them with "cmp -l" and check if it's only single bytes that are changed or if it is a whole block of random for example. -- Stefan Seyfried "For a successful technology, reality must take precedence over public relations, for nature cannot be fooled." -- Richard Feynman -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse-kernel+unsubscribe@opensuse.org To contact the owner, e-mail: opensuse-kernel+owner@opensuse.org