Date: Sun, 17 Nov 2002 19:54:48 -0500 From: Craig Rodrigues <rodrigc@attbi.com> To: Maxim Sobolev <sobomax@FreeBSD.org> Cc: stable@FreeBSD.org, marks@ripe.net, tlambert2@mindspring.com, bmilekic@unixdaemons.com, dl-freebsd@catspoiler.org, stranger@sberbank.sibnet.ru, vova@sw.ru, sos@freebsd.dk, udo.schweigert@siemens.com, ktsin@acm.org, hackers@FreeBSD.org Subject: Re: Memory corruption in -STABLE on P4/2GHz Message-ID: <20021117195448.A54706@attbi.com> In-Reply-To: <20021117211654.GE6115@vega.vega.com>; from sobomax@FreeBSD.org on Sun, Nov 17, 2002 at 11:16:54PM %2B0200 References: <20021117211654.GE6115@vega.vega.com>
next in thread | previous in thread | raw e-mail | index | archive | help
On Sun, Nov 17, 2002 at 11:16:54PM +0200, Maxim Sobolev wrote: > Hi there, > > I'm observing very strange memory corruption problems with 2GHz P4 > system running 4.7 (security branch as of today). Under the load > (make -j20 buildworld) the compiler or make(1) often die with signal > 11. I found in mailing lists that there is similarly looking problem > with -current, any chances that -stable is affected as well? I'm seeing similar errors on -current on my AMD K6-2 machine: CPU: AMD-K6(tm) 3D processor (400.91-MHz 586-class CPU) Origin = "AuthenticAMD" Id = 0x58c Stepping = 12 Features=0x8021bf<FPU,VME,DE,PSE,TSC,MSR,MCE,CX8,PGE,MMX> AMD Features=0xffffffff80000800<SYSCALL,3DNow!> Data TLB: 128 entries, 2-way associative Instruction TLB: 64 entries, 1-way associative L1 data cache: 32 kbytes, 32 bytes/line, 2 lines/tag, 2-way associative L1 instruction cache: 32 kbytes, 32 bytes/line, 2 lines/tag, 2-way associative Write Allocate Enable Limit: 384M bytes Write Allocate 15-16M bytes: Enable I am seeing make or /usr/libexec/cc1 intermittently coredump with SIG 11 or SIG 10 errors when trying to do a buildworld. I wasn't sure if it was because I had flaky hardware or not. -- Craig Rodrigues http://www.gis.net/~craigr rodrigc@attbi.com To Unsubscribe: send mail to majordomo@FreeBSD.org with "unsubscribe freebsd-stable" in the body of the message
Want to link to this message? Use this URL: <https://mail-archive.FreeBSD.org/cgi/mid.cgi?20021117195448.A54706>