On Saturday 31 December 2005 00:20, Mark v Wolher wrote:
[snip]
> >
> > This is good news -- you stand a better chance of achieving the stability
> > you require by eliminating variables. VMWare and NVIDIA are useful
> > softwares, and I would not deny that, but they are closed source and thus
> > any conflicts resulting from their use are not necessary LKML material
> > (however, if the interaction is generic and is as a result of a kernel
> > bug, then the maintainer would very much like to hear it).
>
> Okay, i have something interesting now, i only had the nvidia module
> loaded so my x-configuration starts up as usual. (not saying the nvidia
> module is flawless, i'm sure it still contains bugs)
> But here is the crash info, this time it was mozilla, i think this
> speaks more hehe :
>
> Dec 31 00:55:28 localhost kernel: mm/memory.c:106: bad pgd 061f0c08.
> Dec 31 00:55:28 localhost kernel: mm/memory.c:106: bad pgd 06b96000.
> Dec 31 00:55:28 localhost kernel: mm/memory.c:106: bad pgd 18000bf8.
> Dec 31 00:55:28 localhost kernel: ------------[ cut here ]------------
> Dec 31 00:55:28 localhost kernel: kernel BUG at mm/mmap.c:2214!
> Dec 31 00:55:28 localhost kernel: invalid operand: 0000 [#1]
> Dec 31 00:55:28 localhost kernel: SMP
> Dec 31 00:55:28 localhost kernel: Modules linked in: nvidia
Steady and sure progress. Now, the trace below doesn't explicitly mention any
nvidia symbols, but this line must disappear before anybody will bother to
read your report.
Remove the module. This does not mean unload, this means "never load in the
first place". Then reproduce the problem. If you are successful, send a new
email (not pinned to this thread) with a subject a la "kernel BUG at
mm/mmap.c:2214". State that the kernel is not tainted.
At this point all you can do is wait. Good luck!
--
Cheers,
Alistair.
'No sense being pessimistic, it probably wouldn't work anyway.'
Third year Computer Science undergraduate.
1F2 55 South Clerk Street, Edinburgh, UK.
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