Chris Snook <[email protected]> wrote:
> David Madore wrote:
>> On Mon, Sep 17, 2007 at 11:11:52AM -0700, Jeremy Fitzhardinge wrote:
>>> Boot memtest86 for a little while before booting the kernel? And if you
>>> haven't already run it for a while, then that would be your first step
>>> anyway.
>>
>> Indeed, that does the trick, thanks for the suggestion. So I can be
>> quite confident, now, that my RAM is sane and it's just that the BIOS
>> doesn't initialize it properly.
>>
>> But I'd still like some way of filling the RAM when Linux starts (or
>> perhaps in the bootloader), because letting memtest86 run after every
>> cold reboot isn't a very satisfactory solution.
>
> Bootloaders like to do things like run in 16-bit or 32-bit mode on boxes where
> higher bitness is necessary to access all the memory. It may be possible to
> do this in the bootloader, but the BIOS is clearly the correct place to fix
> this problem.
Just an idea: Does this BIOS have an option to (not) skip the full memory
test on bootup?
--
Have you ever noticed that the Klingons are all speaking unix?
"Grep ls awk chmod." "Mknod ksh tar imap."
"Wall fsck yacc!" (that last is obviously a curse of some sort)
-- Gandalf Parker
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