Before you do... swap them 1 for 1... you can possibly identify which stick
is faulty...
On 17 May 2015 12:09, "Leo" <linux@???> wrote:
> Hmmm, hadn't thought of that either. There's four slots and two sticks. So
> I could move the two sticks to the free slots. I'm running another mprime
> test at the mo, so I'll give that a go later.
>
> Thanks,
> Leo
>
> On 17/05/15 12:06, Neil Stone wrote:
>
>> What happens if you swap the ram slots (assume you have more than one
>> ram stick) ?
>>
>> On 17 May 2015 12:02, "Leo" <linux@???
>> <mailto:linux@fractal.me.uk>> wrote:
>>
>> Unfortunately none of my computers share the same RAM type so I'd
>> have to purchase some more for that. So I thought I'd give this
>> memory mapping a go first.
>>
>> Leo
>>
>> On 17/05/15 11:41, Neil Stone wrote:
>>
>> Damnit hit send too soon.
>>
>> Try testing ram in another system is another, and very
>> conclusive, test.
>>
>> Enjoy
>>
>> On 17 May 2015 11:38, "Leo" <linux@???
>> <mailto:linux@fractal.me.uk>
>> <mailto:linux@fractal.me.uk <mailto:linux@fractal.me.uk>>> wrote:
>>
>>
>>
>> On 14/05/15 09:40, Gordon Scott wrote:
>>
>> I'd go along with that.
>>
>> The ones that normally go are the electrolytic types ..
>> aluminium cans
>> with black(usually) printing. The electrolyte is a
>> liquid and
>> tends to
>> dry out over a number of years use in a warm
>> environment. Swelling,
>> (usually of the flat top), discolouration, oozing
>> electrolyte.
>>
>> The next most likely candidates are tantalum
>> capacitors, which
>> tend to
>> be little black rectangular block. When they fail, they
>> tend to
>> blow a
>> corner off of the moulding, or sometimes just a small
>> hole/crater.
>>
>> Most of the rest will be ceramics, which are usually
>> trouble-free.
>>
>> Gordon.
>>
>>
>> So I've had a look at the capacitors, and I can't see any
>> that look
>> broken. I've also done some more investigation and found the
>> following: if the computer locks up and I then run memtest
>> on reboot
>> it finds errors in the same memory locations each time.
>> However if I
>> reboot cleanly it doesn't find errors. The fact it finds
>> them in the
>> same locations would indicate to me that it's a memory
>> problem.
>> However, I also ran the mprime torture test, and that
>> failed on both
>> the memory intensive test, and the test that doesn't use much
>> memory. Which would tend to indicate that it's not a memory
>> problem.
>>
>> I'm now trying a kernel parameter that should stop it using
>> the
>> "bad" memory to see if that fixes it...
>>
>> Leo
>>
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