You've probably tried this, but the worst problem I've had with ASUS boards is the ACPI issue. Have you tried adding "acpi=off" or "pci=noapci" to the grub boot line ?
Gareth.
On Mon, 2003-12-15 at 18:41, Marcel Janssen wrote:
Hi, Ever since I installed fedora on my new system I haven't been able to get it to run stable. I keep on having systems freezes no matter what I tried so far. A log of this can be seen here : http://members.home.nl/mphm.janssen/files/kernel-oops.txt When looking at that, it seems like several different processes cause these oops and I suspect this is not really caused by fedora's kernel but some hardware related issue. The problem is that I have a hard time finding anything wrong with it. Could someone shed some light on this log for me and give me some advice on how to find the real cause ? ( got the feeling it's related to networking, but not sure as I already switched between other network adapters and still get the same problems). My system : AMD 2500 barton CPU 512MB RAM Asus A7V600 Mobo (onboard LAN and audio not used) dxr3 card for video playback IEEE-1394 card Matrox millenium II for normal VGA display (old PCI card, but enough for my needs) RTL 8139 Ethernet 100Mb/s (internal LAN) Tulip Ethernet 10Mb/s (internet connection) 80GB maxtor disk DVD ROM Regards, Marcel Janssen -- fedora-list mailing list fedora-list@xxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe: http://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-list
-- Gareth Bult <Gareth@xxxxxxxxxx> |
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