CentOS 6.4 died on me again. Didn't leave any traces that I could find. The screen just suddenly went black. Couldn't switch to another virtual terminal. Pushing the reset button worked. Didn't have to power off this time. -- Michael hennebry at web.cs.ndsu.NoDak.edu "On Monday, I'm gonna have to tell my kindergarten class, whom I teach not to run with scissors, that my fiance ran me through with a broadsword." -- Lily
On Sun, 24 Nov 2013, Michael Hennebry wrote:> CentOS 6.4 died on me again. > Didn't leave any traces that I could find. > The screen just suddenly went black. > Couldn't switch to another virtual terminal. > Pushing the reset button worked. > Didn't have to power off this time.For some reason I got back an old set of Firefox tabs. The second to last time I started Firefox, it didn't give me my old tabs. It just welcomed me to CentOS. -- Michael hennebry at web.cs.ndsu.NoDak.edu "On Monday, I'm gonna have to tell my kindergarten class, whom I teach not to run with scissors, that my fiance ran me through with a broadsword." -- Lily
On 11/24/2013 9:45 PM, Michael Hennebry wrote:> CentOS 6.4 died on me again.only time that has EVER happened to me, on dozens and dozens of systems, has been when there's been a serious hardware problem. -- john r pierce 37N 122W somewhere on the middle of the left coast
On 12/4/2013 7:50 PM, Warren Young wrote:> You questioned someone else's DMM in another post,actually, the other post didn't say how he measured the voltage, I was assuming via the motherboard monitoring circuits ('lmsensors' or whatever), which are notoriously inaccurate ... -- john r pierce 37N 122W somewhere on the middle of the left coast
Well just a note that sometimes CPU and other parts overload can cause a similar effect while newer software might offer better stability based on some sensors in the MB. All The Bests, Eliezer On 11/25/2013 07:45 AM, Michael Hennebry wrote:> CentOS 6.4 died on me again. > Didn't leave any traces that I could find. > The screen just suddenly went black. > Couldn't switch to another virtual terminal. > Pushing the reset button worked. > Didn't have to power off this time.