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I set up a 281 frame animation in blender to run overnight. PROBLEM: When I came back to it the next morning, the system had these properites, all which weren't ...
  1. #1
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    Daily lockups with Debian dervs (Knoppix, Ubuntu)

    I set up a 281 frame animation in blender to run overnight.

    PROBLEM:
    When I came back to it the next morning, the system had these properites, all which weren't there last night.
    i) internet is very sluggish
    ii) switching between windows is extremely slow
    iii) I am unable to switch between desktop window frames
    iv) I cannot load any new apps (infitesimally slow response from K menus)
    v) I cannot get a response to requests for shutdown.
    vi) Only redress is power key.

    This problem is preventing my working in linux. If anyone can give me any advice I will be eternally grateful. I appeal to this community for help, as perhaps you've seen this happen before.

    FREQUENCY:
    It happens:
    i) On one box (Aptiva Netvista 2.8 GHz, 512 MB RAM), a box where I once in my foggy recollection saw a MEMTEST failure (but not this week). It can happen no matter what I've done and especially whn I never ran blender.
    a) With Knoppix 5.01 (HDD install or live boot) perhaps 40% of the time.
    b) With multiple versions of k/edu/ubuntu (HDD install, live boot). Ubuntu being much more egregious-- it happens every time I leave it alone for 1 h.
    c) If I remember correctly, "never" with SUSE 10.0 (but the USB response time is unacceptably slow, a feature confirmed by an expert in their forum).
    ii) On another box (same model, different year, 1.5GB RAM):
    a) With kubuntu 6.01 HDD install just one time, and it's the last straw.


    DISTRO SWITCH ?
    I am willing to switch distros (again-- I do it about every two weeks) if anyone can assure me that they had hardware that was prone to this type of problem and another distro fixed it. My unnegotiable principles for the distro are:
    i) atheros wifi driver built in. (SUSE 10.1 is out)
    ii) Rapid, smooth USB connection (SUSE 10.0 is out)
    iii) povray and blender (v>2.3) installable form a pacakge management system of some level.
    My negotiable principles are:
    iii) It ain't from Redmond
    iv) free version avail to public on same terms as corporate. (But hey, I'll paypal them some bucks if they have such a high level of hardware competency).
    v) live CD.

    POSSIBLE ADVICE:
    i) Switch distro to _________.
    ii) You need to use the magic cheat code set of keystrokes to wake up the system and it is_____.
    iii) You need to eschew ever using mode "X" of auto sleep/ auto hibernate / auto standby; eschew screen saver "X". (This advice gets me through my day job on a quirky WinXP laptop).
    iv) Re-flash my bios. (A person in my local LUG suggested this, and I'm dubious, but if it were the solution, I'm going Vista).
    v) Eschew desktop environment "X".
    vi) Switch physical memory.

  2. #2
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    check how much ram shows up in your bios boot post. Maybe a chip failed?
    check your proc speed (cat /proc/cpuinfo)

    ...maybe some powermanagement setting kicked in and never reset back to "optimum" due to the hard shutdown?

    edit: didnt realize it was happening on other boxes...What is the hardware on the machines?

  3. #3
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    One one box, it was one time, and yeah, maybe after I did too much goofing around with some bleeding edge apps. On the other, with a year of various linux distros on it, it was like 100% of the overnights for ubuntu, and 30-40% for knoppix.

    Thanks kindly for your consideration here. I'll try replacing the RAM chip.

    Can you help me make sure I know which powermanagement settings I need to shut off for KDE? thanks.

  4. #4
    Linux Engineer d38dm8nw81k1ng's Avatar
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    it sounds like something is fried. if it's just one box and multiple distros i'm almost certain that something in your machine is broken. try memtest again.
    Here's why Linux is easier than Windows:
    Package Managers! Apt-Get and Portage (among others) allow users to install programs MUCH easier than Windows can.
    Hardware Drivers. In SuSE, ALL the hardware is detected and installed automatically! How is this harder than Windows' constant disc changing and rebooting?

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