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Date:      Fri, 19 Jul 2013 10:22:21 -0500
From:      David Noel <david.i.noel@gmail.com>
To:        Eduardo Morras <emorrasg@yahoo.es>
Cc:        feld@feld.me, freebsd-questions@freebsd.org
Subject:   Re: [Bulk] FreeBSD upgrade woes (8.3 -> 8.4)
Message-ID:  <CAHAXwYAL1_up6fm1-rH2e34CYQ4_j29Dk%2B-qA=T9%2B3xkzZ-Uug@mail.gmail.com>
In-Reply-To: <20130711120039.a99aeea20ecd078b9d29f18a@yahoo.es>
References:  <CAHAXwYCaYGoF9N0GRFRiG_hqVxdM23NjMSfPsw%2BGPnfEmgtP9Q@mail.gmail.com> <CA%2B8gk9_FgThSWuSrg0b5O0Hnqd0HtvTRKfgnVZ3wuXeenhfucw@mail.gmail.com> <CAHAXwYCym-5c7Mao2Gx5iPSm_oN-EmwLiBJnEGESodxsRwc16Q@mail.gmail.com> <20130711120039.a99aeea20ecd078b9d29f18a@yahoo.es>

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> Perhaps make buildkernel was compiled with -j >1, it's known to create a
> buggy kernel. Check your make configuration. Adding a -B, like make -B -j N
> buildkernel may work and is fast if -j is set to number or processors, but
> it's safer do a make -j 1 buildkernel, same for buildworld.

I replaced the kernel with the one on the 8.4 memstick and it booted
just fine. I then built and installed a kernel without using the j
flag to test Eduardo's theory. It booted without problem. Maybe
there's something to this -j >1 causing buggy kernels rumor.

-David



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