[ale] Dealing with System Lock Up
Jim Kinney
jim.kinney at gmail.com
Thu Jan 15 12:26:18 EST 2015
On Jan 15, 2015 11:57 AM, "Beddingfield, Allen" <allen at ua.edu> wrote:
>
> FYI, that error is usually associated with the Adobe Flash Player
plugin. Are you using it? If you are, I would maybe suspect a video driver
issue or something Flash related.
+1
You can use ctl-alt-f2 to get a local console and killall -9
plugin-container
>From that console you can use various top and *stat commands for some
details.
Xorg disables ctl-alt-backspace by default. I forgot the logic behind the
change but it made sense at the time. It can be added back but that takes a
Google search on Xorg ctlaltbkspce or similar.
>From the console on a systemd machine, you can kill X with:
systemctl isolate multi-user.target as root of course. Graphical.target is
the one to start X .
>
> Allen B.
>
> Sent from my iPhone
>
> On Jan 15, 2015, at 10:23 AM, Gregory Beyer <beyerg at bellsouth.net<mailto:
beyerg at bellsouth.net>> wrote:
>
> Hi,
>
> I've been having a chronic problem with my system locking up, leaving me
with no alternative but to Alt-SysRq+REISUB.
>
> Better than finding ways to *respond* to this situation, I would really
like to get to _root_ cause and solve it. Where does the group suggest I
look, post-reboot, to find out what caused the lockup? There must be some
clues logged somewhere. I would appreciate any ideas.
>
> I'm running Ubuntu 14.4, with MATE 1.8.1. 4 GB RAM, 300 GB + free disk.
>
> Lockup seems to happen frequently when I find a Firefox pop-up stating:
"A script has stopped running, do you want to stop or wait?" Sometimes I
can click stop, and get things going again, other times, the pointer will
not move, mouse will not click. Alt+tab won't swap windows - total system
freeze. On other occasions there is no FF pop-up symptom . . . system just
freezes.
>
> Ctrl+alt+backspace *should* kill my X session, but it has no effect,
seems to be disabled (?) I would like to re-enable this. Can anyone
suggest how?
>
> Likewise, Alt+sysreq+K *should* kill all processes, but again, this has
no effect. How can I re-enable?
>
> I finally have to resort to alt+sysreq+REISUB which does work, BUT that
is pretty much a hard boot, I loose all of my work not saved, and frankly,
one should not have to use a three-finger salute on a linux PC ala Windows
to regain control. Linux just should not be doing this.
>
> Thanks very much for any ideas where to go from here!
>
> Greg Beyer
>
>
> --
>
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