I have similar issues on totally different hardware. Hardware that runs 10.3 just fine has crashing issues on 11.0. I don't know what the issue is. On Sat, Sep 13, 2008 at 1:19 PM, Ted Markowitz <tjm@cognosys.net> wrote:
I just purchased a new Dell Inspiron 530 tower system (Intel(R) Core™2 Quad processor Q6600, 6Gb RAM, 750Gb disk, Intel on-board G33 video chipset---which I'd rather not be using, but that was what the system package had in it) to act primarily as a server machine in my home office. It came with 64-bit Vista installed (of course), and once I figured out how to partition the all-Vista disk into a much smaller Vista partition (not as easy as it sounds since the Vista partitioner won't let you shrink volumes past the point where it keeps some system files, no matter how hard you try to get rid of them, but that's another story), I repartitioned the rest of the disk to be Linux friendly.
I then installed openSUSE 11.0 on it (I've done this several times before on other systems of mine), upgraded with all the latest patches and updates, and got ready to run with it. Although it seemed to run OK---for a while anyway---it's frozen up on me at least 3 or 4 times in the last two days: twice when I wasn't using it actively and another time as I was typing away in a KDE session. Nothing would respond: couldn't restart X (Ctrl-Alt-BS twice) and couldn't reboot from the keyboard (Ctrl-Alt-Del). I needed to do a full power-off/power-on to get it up and running again.
Looking for some cause, I checked dmesg, /var/log/messages, and /var/log/Xorg.0.log for hints as to what may be happening. Unfortunately there's absolutely nothing out of the ordinary in any of them; no warning messages, no kernel panic, no nothing. The logs look perfectly normal up till the point of the freeze and then the booting msgs appear after I push the power button.
Anyone have any ideas or experiences (good/bad) with a similar configuration? I have all Dell's in my office, so in principle this one should work too. The only major differences are the fact that this one is a Quad-core machine and that it's using the on-board Intel graphics chipset for video. All my others are single CPU's or Core 2 Duo's, and the video on those is either ATI or NVidia.
One other piece of evidence: since I need to get this thing up and running now, I installed the latest Ubuntu 8.04 on another partition to see if the distro might have anything to do with it. For the past 24 hours or so,it hasn't hicupped yet. Honestly, I'd rather stick with SUSE on all my systems and can still multi-boot back into it, but I need a stable system ASAP.
Any pointers or aid would be much appreciated.
TIA,
//ted
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