[ale] Kernel panic
Christopher Fowler
cfowler at outpostsentinel.com
Mon Feb 13 16:51:28 EST 2006
This box is almost 3 years old and has had no panics up to a few months
ago. This leads me to believe nothing is software could have caused
this. I reformatted the swap partitions and I could run fsck on the
ext3 md0. My gut says that if box is fine for 3 years then goes south
then hardware must be at fault. Also I reinstalled this system back in
12-05 due to the same fault so I don't think any disk corruption that
could have happened over 3 years could have killed it over 1.5 months.
This is a PC Chips motherboard and my guess is that if I open up the
case I might even fine some blown caps :) Unfortunately this box is in
Pineville, NC and I'm in Buford, GA
On Mon, 2006-02-13 at 16:39 -0500, Emil Man wrote:
> Chris,
>
> I have seen Kernel Panic happen for several reasons in my systems. I
> once had a kernel panic because /etc/fstab got messed up and my hard
> drives went all out of whack. Grub was looking in /dev/hdb for the
> kernel image which was in /dev/hda. I dont know why because all I did
> was put in a new drive for a few minutes to test something, the
> restored everything again as normal, and poooooffff....
>
> 2006/2/13, Christopher Fowler <cfowler at outpostsentinel.com>:
> My thoughts exactly on controller. This system has 2 drives
> that are
> raid1 via mdtools so I was not seeing disk death. It was
> appearing as
> if the whole disk system was disappearing. The last time this
> happened
> was in December and it caused ext2 corruption that propagated
> across the
>
> I would definatelly run fsck on your disks, to see if the filesystem
> is in any way corrupt, or if you have bad blocks, etc. Obviously if
> you are using a different filesystem, run the appropriate tool. I
> think fsck is for ext2. I know I have reiser on most of my boxen and I
> run reiserfsck or something along those lines. I use toms for such
> cases since you obviously cannot fsck a mounted disk.
>
>
> mirror. The only fix was a full reinstall. Since I had no
> access
> to /var/log/messages because of the corruption I had no clue
> what had
> happened. Now the box simply went south and after reboot I
> was able to
> see the syslog file and pull that oops from the file. I then
> saw many
> other programs reporting messages to the syslog that they
> could no
> longer open files. That is how I knew the system was still
> up.
>
>
> Emil
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