Re: 64 bit kernel

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I saw a similar issue many years ago that turned out to be a chipset bug. This was a PII system that used 16 bit wide modules. When using only one module, the chipset "fooled" the OS into thinking that it was doing 32 bit wide operations. However, it failed at full speed. Reducing the memory bus speed or installing modules in pairs "fixed" the problem. I suspect a bus or memory controller issue rather than the kernel.

The failure mode was exactly as you describe. It manifested itself as disk errors or DMA failures. Unfortunately the chipset vendor determined that it was a silicon bug and said that they would NOT fix it!

Mike

----- Original Message ----- From: "Stan Gammons" <[email protected]>
To: "Linux Kernel Mailing List" <[email protected]>
Sent: Sunday, January 08, 2006 11:27 PM
Subject: 64 bit kernel


Hi everyone,

I was wondering if anyone can tell me if the following is a 64 bit
kernel problem or if it's a BIOS problem.

I have a Gigabyte K8NSC-939 with an AMD64 3200+ (Venice) CPU version F7
BIOS. When I first got this board, I put a single 512 Mb PC2700 DIMM in
it from an older Celeron board I had. 32 bit Suse 10.0 and 32 bit FC4
loaded fine. When I tried the 64 bit version of either, I kept getting
DMA errors on boot like the HD or controller was bad. After some
searching I found others with similar problems and they had to use
"noapic nolapic" kernel boot options to install and boot the OS. That
worked for me too and I was able to install the OS.

After I upgraded the memory and put 2 512Mb PC3200 DIMMS in the board. I
tried a 64 bit install again. This time I no longer had to use the
"noapic nolapic" options. With a single DIMM, BIOS (during boot)
reported "single channel" memory. With 2 DIMMS, BIOS (during boot)
reports "dual channel" memory. My question though is does the 64 bit
kernel require "dual channel" memory or is this a BIOS problem?



Stan


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