Re: Help me solve X11 "shmget(lowmem) errror: Invalid agrument"

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Les wrote:
> On Fri, 2007-02-02 at 08:07 -0500, David King wrote:
>> ThinkPad Z60t, FC 4 and X11 6.8.2.  All of a sudden, after working fine
>> for months, X fails to start at boot and I get an error in Xorg.0.log
>> that says "shmget(lowmem) error: Invalid argument".  I haven't messed
>> with the system config lately so I can't imagine what's causing this.  I
>> think I've eliminated hardware problems as a cause, Knoppix and a new
>> install of FC6 on another drive both start X just fine.
>>
>> A Google search on this error finds a couple of occurrences, one of
>> which was solved by freeing up buffer space that had been dedicated to
>> TCP buffers.  I haven't been doing anything like that on my machine but
>> that solution suggests this problem might have something to do with low
>> memory utilization.
>>
>> I've got no idea how to go about troubleshooting this error.  Any help
>> would be appreciated.  Otherwise I'll have to rebuild from scratch and I
>> really hate to do that.
> A change such as you have described, along with no similar issues would
> make memory a suspect.  Try the memtest recommended in some of the other
> threads.  Many notebooks do not have Error Correcting Memory (ecc
> designation) and will not show parity errors.  However when memory fails
> you can get strange errors, not detectable by loading other programs.

Right, I should have thought of that.  Ran multiple passes of memtest
overnight without finding anything wrong.  Probably not memory.

So I resign myself to reinstalling the system and start doing so on
another disk.  In the process I install my display switching setup which
involves a custom Fn-F7 hotkey script that handles switching from the
oddball 1280x768 normal resolution for this machine to a 1024x768
resolution that works with a projector while turning off horizontal
expansion and turning the CRT port on, accomplished with xrandr and the
ibm-acpi driver.  Somehow, after setting that up and testing it in the
new system install, when I swap disks back to the old system where I was
seeing the original problem in order to copy over some data, the problem
is gone.  Very strange.  So my story, and I'm sticking to it, is that
somehow some bit somewhere got twiddled in a way that a power cycle
wouldn't fix it and my poking at the video hardware with xrandr and
ibm-acpi during the clean system install cleared the problem.

Ok, not sure I buy that either but my fingers, and toes, are all crossed.

- --
David King
dave@xxxxxxxxxxxx
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