Signal 11 while compiling the kernel This FAQ describes what the possible causes are for an effect that bothers lots of people lately. Namely that a linux(*)-kernel (or any other large package for that matter) compile crashes with a "signal 11". The cause can be software or (most likely) hardware. Read on to find out more. (*) Of course nothing is Linux specific. If your hardware is flaky, Linux, Windows 3.1, FreeBSD, Windows NT and NextStep will all crash. If you are not reading this at http://www.bitwizard.nl/sig11/, that's where you can find the most recent version. For those of you who prefer reading this in French, the French translation can be found at http://www.linux-france.com/article/sig11fr/. Email me at R.E.Wolff@BitWizard.nl if you find any spelling errors, worthwhile additions or with an "it also happened to me" story. (Note that I reject some suggested additions on my belief that it is technical nonsense). _________________________________________________________________ The Sig11 FAQ QUESTION My kernel compile crashes with gcc: Internal compiler error: program cc1 got fatal signal 11 What is wrong with the compiler? Which version of the compiler do I need? Is there something wrong with the kernel? ANSWER Most likely there is nothing wrong with your installation, your compiler or kernel. It very likely has something to do with your hardware. There are a variety of subsystems that can be wrong, and there is a variety of ways to fix it. Read on, and you'll find out more. There is one big exception to this "rule". Red Hat 5.0. There is more near the end. _________________________________________________________________ QUESTION Ok it may not be the software, How do I know for sure? ANSWER First lets make sure it is the hardware that is causing your trouble. When the "make" stops, simply type "make" again. If it compiles a few more files before stopping, it must be hardware that is causing you troubles. If it immediately stops again (i.e. scans a few directories with "nothing to be done for xxxx" before bombing at exactly the same place), try dd if=/dev/HARD_DISK of=/dev/null bs=1024k count=MEGS Change HARD_DISK to "hda" to the name of your harddisk (e.g. hda or sda. Or use "df ."). Change the MEGS to the number of megabytes of main memory that you have. This will cause the first several megabytes of your harddisk to be read from disk, forcing the C source files and the gcc binary to be reread from disk the next time you run it. Now type make again. If it still stops in the same place I'm starting to wonder if you're reading the right FAQ, as it is starting to look like a software problem after all.... Take a peek at the "what are the other possibilities" question..... If without this "dd" command the compiler keeps on stopping at the same place, but moves to another place after you use the "dd" you definitely have a disk->ram transfer problem. QUESTION What does it really mean? ANSWER Well, the compiler accessed memory outside its memory range. If this happens on working hardware it's a programming error inside the compiler. That's why it says "internal compiler error". However when the hardware occasionally flips a bit, gcc uses so many pointers, that it is likely to end up accessing something outside of its addressing range. (random addresses are mostly outside your addressing range, as not very many people have a significant part of 4G as main memory... :-) It seems that nowadays, everybody with "signal 11" problems gets directed to this page. If you're developping your own software or have software that hasn't been debugged quite enough, "signal 11" (or segmentation fault) is still a strong hint that there is something wrong with the program. Only when you can cause a "known working" program like "gcc" to crash on a dataset (e.g. the Linux-kernel) that has also been well-tested, then it becomes a hint that there is something wrong with your hardware. _________________________________________________________________ QUESTION Ok. I may have a hardware problem what is it? ANSWER If it happens to be the hardware it can be: * Main memory. Your main memory might be getting an occasional bit wrong. If this happens on the "writes", you won't see any parity errors. There are several ways to fix it: + The memory speed might be too slow. Increase the number of wait states in the BIOS. This could be caused by the AMIBIOSs autoconfig option: it may only know about 486s running upto 80 MHz, whereas you currently buy 100 MHz versions. -- Pat V. + The memory speed might be too slow. Get faster DRAM SIMMs. For example current ASUS motherboards require 60 ns DRAM if you have a 100, or 133 MHz processor (Take a look in your motherboard's manual). I've heard reports that 70 ns also works, reliability problems like random sig11's belong to the possibilities.... (I wouldn't take the risk) -- Andrew Eskilsson (mpt95aes@pt.hk-r.se) + There is a bad chip on one of the SIMMs. If you own more than 1 bank of memory you might be able to pull SIMMs and see if the problem goes away. Be careful for STATIC!!! + We handled a hard one here the last week. It turned out that ALL 4 16Mb SIMMs were broken in that they dropped a bit around once per hour. This was sufficient to crash the machine in about a day, or crash a kernel compile in about an hour. A new set of SIMMs works perfectly. It took a long while to diagnose this one, because all 4 of the SIMMs were affected equally, so leaving half of the memory out didn't change things. Mark Kettner (kettner@cat.et.tudelft.nl) reports that his system was capable of running my memory test for 2300 times faultlessly, but then detected around 10 errors. It then continued detecting no faults for a few hundred runs again..... In his case running kernel compiles was a much more efficient way of detecting the health of the system (in the most stable configuration the system could compile around 14 kernels before going bzurk). His solution was to "trade in" the old memory for a so called "memory upgrade". The shopkeeper then "tests" in their memory tester, which OKs the memory. he then got a good discount on the new memory :-). + It seems that some 30-72 pin converters can cause memory errors. (It hasn't been proven whether the 4 SIMMS in the converter had gone bad, or if the SIMM converter was at fault. The SIMMS had been functioning perfectly for years before they were moved into the converter....) -- Naresh Sharma (n.sharma@is.twi.tudelft.nl). Paul Gortmaker (paul.gortmaker@anu.edu.au) adds that the SIMM converters should have at least 4 bypass capacitors to keep the power supply of the SIMMs clean. + If the refresh of the DRAM isn't functioning properly, the DRAMs will slowly lose their information. Some (486) motherboards stop refreshing correctly when you turn on "hidden refresh". There seems to be a program called "dram" around that can also mess up your refresh to cause sig11 problems. -- Hank Barta (hank@pswin.chi.il.us), Ron Tapia (tapia@nmia.com) + The number of waitstates could be too low. Increase the number of waiststates in the BIOS for a fix. The Intel Endeavour board doesn't allow you to increase the memory waitstates. This can supposedly be fixed by flashing a MR BIOS into the motherboard. -- David Halls (david.halls@cl.cam.ac.uk) * Cache memory. Your cache memory might be getting an occasional bit wrong. Caches are usually not equipped with parity. You can diagnose that this is the case by turning off the cache in the BIOS. If the problem goes away it is probably the cache. There are several ways to fix it: + The cache memory speed might be too slow. Increase the number of wait states in the BIOS. + The cache memory speed might be too slow. Get faster SRAM chips. + There is a bad chip in your cache. It is unlikely that you can swap chips as easily as with SIMMs. Be careful for STATIC!!! -- Joseph Barone (barone@mntr02.psf.ge.com) + The cache might be set to "write back" while there is a bug in the write back implementation of your chipset. The motherboard where this happened was a "MV020 486VL3H" (with 20M RAM) -- Scott Brumbaugh (scottb@borris.beachnet.com) (Mail address doesn't work. Scott: Get back at me with a valid return address) + The motherboard may require a jumper to switch between Cache On A Stick and the old-fashioned dip chip cache. (JP16 on Rev 2.4 ASUS P/I-P55TP4XE motherboards) * Disk transfers. A block coming from disk might incur an occasional bit error. + If you have this problem, you are most likely to have to do the "dd" command to "move" the problem from one place to the next.... + Some IDE harddisks cannot handle the "irq_unmasking" option. This may only show under load. And it could show as a sig11. + Do you have a kalok 31xx? Throw it in the garbage. (or sell it to a DOS user) + SCSI? Termination? A short bus might still work (unreliably that is) with bad termination. A long bus might get errors anyway. Can you turn on parity on the host and the DISK? * The CPU itself. Some batches of processors have a much higher percentage of them that happen to be "bad". A few years ago: original Intel-Pentium-120's. Today AMD K6/2-300's (1998, produced in weeks 34 through 39!). If this turns out to be the problem, you're entitled to a new processor. Go and exchange it where you bought it. (Forget about those P120's, it's not worth the trouble... ;-) -- Guillaume Cottenceau (gcottenc@ens.insa-rennes.fr). * Overclocking. Some vendors (or private people) think it is possible to overclock some CPUs. Some of them may work others don't. You might want to try turning off turbo (note that most pentium motherboards no longer support a non-turbo mode) and see if the problem goes away. Check the speed of your CPU compared (printed on it, carefully remove the fan if necessary) with what the motherboard jumpers or BIOS settings say.... It seems that even Intel may make mistakes in this area. I now have several reliable reports that official pentium would sig11 at their rated speed, but not at a lower speed. As for some speeds the motherboard is only stressed HARDER for a slower processor speed, (120 MHz-> motherboard runs at 60MHz, 100MHz-> motherboard runs at 66MHz), I think it is unlikely that this has anything to do with the motherboard. Moreover a new 120MHz processor is now functioning correctly. -- Samuel Ramac (sramac@vnet.ibm.com). This is not unique to Intel or any of its competitors. * CPU temperature. A high speed processor might overheat without the correct heat sink. This can also be caused by a failing fan. (My personal '486 has a fan that takes a few minutes to get up to speed. It probably will never really FAIL because it's now decommisioned :-). The CPU can become erratic if "pushed" by compiling a kernel. This problem becomes worse if you disable "HALT" on the LILO command line. Linux tries to power-down the CPU by executing the "halt" instruction when the system is idle. This preserves power, and therefore the CPU temperature drops when the system is idle. You therefore might not notice this problem when simply editing, and it might only surface after hours of CPU intensive jobs when the ambient temp is high. If you have a Pentium with Fdiv bug, it is advisable to trade it in at Intel. They will send you a new one that preconfigured with an official Intel-approved FAN. Also note that most normal glues are very bad thermal conductors. There is special thermal glue available that should be used when a fan needs to be glued to a CPU. -- Arno Griffioen (arno@ixe.net), -- W. Paul Mills (wpmills@midusa.net) -- Alan Wind (wind@imada.ou.dk) Intel says that the allowable temperature ranges for the outside of your CPU is: 0 to +85 C: Intel486 SX, Intel486 DX, IntelDX2, IntelDX4 processor 0 to +95 C: IntelDX2, IntelDX4 OverDrive® processors 0 to +80 C: 60 MHz Pentium® processor 0 to +70 C: 66 to 166 MHz Pentium processor For information on how to measure this and some confirmation of what I say here, see: http://pentium.intel.com/procs/support/faqs/iarcfaq.htm (Especially questions Q5, Q6 and Q12. The document is getting slightly outdated, but it is still very accurate. It seems the questions move around a bit every now and then as well.) * CPU voltage. Some motherboards allow you to select the CPU voltage. Some motherboards badly document the jumper settings that manage this. It seems that a 5V processor might still work most of the time at 3.3 volts..... -- Karl Heyes (krheyes@comp.brad.ac.uk) * RAM voltage. It seems that vendors are preparing for 3.3V RAM now. Most memory is still 5V. (but be careful.... 3.3v RAM will break at 5V.....) * Local bus overloading. At 25 MHz you're allowed to have 3 VesaLocalBus (VLB) cards, At 33MHz only two, at 40MHz only one and guess what at 50MHz NONE! (i.e. you are allowed to run your system with a 50MHz local bus, but then you're not allowed to use any VLB cards). Some systems start acting flaky when you overload the VLB. Even when your VLB isn't overloaded (over the limits stated above), the system may lose a few nanoseconds of margin by adding an extra VLB card, so you might need to add a cache wait state or something after you've added a new VLB card.... -- Richard Postgate (postgate@cafe.net) * Power management. Some laptops (and nowadays also "green" pc's) have power management features. These might interfere with Linux. One feature might save a memory image to HD and restore the RAM when you press a key. This sounds like fun, but Linux device drivers don't expect that the hardware has been turned off between two acesses. Some may recover, but others not. Try turning it off, or enabeling "APM support" in your kernel. -- Elizabeth Ayer (eca23@cam.ac.uk) * The CPU itself. Several people are reporting that they have found nothing to blame except the CPU. This could also have been an incompatibility between the CPU and the motherboard. A wave of reports concerning Intel CPUs has passed (Feb '97). A new wave of reports is coming in that are blaming Cyrix/IBM 6x86 CPUs. Although it could indeed be the CPU, it could also be that your motherboard is incompatible with your CPU. At least I've seen a motherboard manual mention that it isn't compatible with older 6x86's. My own experience is that these devices aren't bad at all, and on a kernel compile I benchmarked a P166+ to be equivalent with a P155 (1.3 times faster than a P120). The Memory hole. Many modern motherboards allow you to use old ISA video cards with one or two megabytes of linear frame buffer. To achieve this, they have to map out the memory just below 16Mb. Nobody actually ever used this feature, but if you turn the memory hole (or LFB support in some BIOSes) on, your machine will certainly be flaky..... -- Paul Connolly (pconnolly@macdux.com.au) _________________________________________________________________ QUESTION RAM timing problems? I fiddled with the bios settings more than a month ago. I've compiled numerous kernels in the mean time and nothing went wrong. It can't be the RAM timing. Right? ANSWER Wrong. Do you think that the RAM manufacturers have a machine that makes 60ns RAMs and another one that makes 70ns RAMs? Off course not! They make a bunch, and then test them. Some meet the specs for 60 ns, others don't. Those might be 61 ns if the manufacturer would have to put a number to it. In that case it is quite likely that it works in your computer when for example the temperature is below 40 degrees centigrade (chips become slower when the temp rises. That's why some supercomputers need so much cooling). However "the coming of summer" or a long compile job may push the temperature inside your computer over the "limit". -- Philippe Troin (ptroin@compass-da.com) _________________________________________________________________ QUESTION I got suckered into not buying ECC memory because it was slightly cheaper. I feel like a fool. I should have bought the more expensive ECC memory. Right? ANSWER Buying the more expensive ECC memory and motherboards protects you against a certain type of errors: Those that occur randomly by passing alpha particles. Because most people can reproduce "signal 11" problems within half an hour using "gcc" but cannot reproduce them by memory testing for hours in a row, that proves to me that it is not simply a random alpha particle flipping a bit. That would get noticed by the memory test too. This means that something else is going on. I have the impression that most sig11 problems are caused by timing errors on the CPU <-> cache <-> memory path. ECC on your main memory doesn't help you in that case. When should you buy ECC? a) When you feel you need it. b) When you have LOTS of RAM. (Why not a cut-off number? Because the cut-off changes with time, just like "LOTS".) Some people feel very strong about everybody using ECC memory. I refer them to reason "a)". _________________________________________________________________ QUESTION Memory problems? My BIOS tests my memory and tells me its ok. I have this fancy DOS program that tells me my memory is OK. Can't be memory right? ANSWER Wrong. The memory test in the BIOS is utterly useless. It may even occasionally OK more memory than really is available, let alone test whether it is good or not. A friend of mine used to have a 640k PC (yeah, this was a long time ago) which had a single 64kbit chip instead of a 256kbit chip in the second 256k bank. This means that he effectively had 320k working memory. Sometimes the BIOS would test 384k as "OK". Anyway, only certain applications would fail. It was very hard to diagnose the actual problem.... Most memory problems only occur under special circumstances. Those circumstances are hardly ever known. gcc Seems to exercise them. Some memory tests, especially BIOS memory tests, don't. I'm no longer working on creating a floppy with a linux kernel and a good memory tester on it. Forget about bugging me about it...... The reason is that a memory test causes the CPU to execute just a few instructions, and the memory access patterns tend to be very regular. Under these circumstances only a very small subset of the memories breaks down. If you're studying Electrical Engineering and are interested in memory testing, a masters thesis could be to figure out what's going on. There are computer manufacturers that would want to sponsor such a project with some hardware that clients claim to be unreliable, but doesn't fail the production tests...... _________________________________________________________________ QUESTION Does it only happen when I compile a kernel? ANSWER Nope. There is no way your hardware can know that you are compiling a kernel. It just so happens that a kernel compile is very tough on your hardware, so it just happens a lot when you are compiling a kernel. * People have seen "random" crashes for example while installing using the slackware installation script.... -- dhn@pluto.njcc.com * Others get "general protection errors" from the kernel (with the crashdump). These are usually in /var/adm/messages. -- fox@graphics.cs.nyu.edu _________________________________________________________________ QUESTION Nothing crashes on NT, Windows 95, OS/2 or DOS. It must be something Linux specific. ANSWER First of all, Linux stresses your hardware more than all of the above. Some OSes like the Microsoft ones named above crash in unpredictable ways anyway. Nobody is going to call Microsoft and say "hey, my windows box crashed today". If you do anyway, they will tell you that you, the user, made an error (see the interview with Bill Gates in a German magazine....) and that since it works now, you should shut up. Those OSes are also somewhat more "predictable" than Linux. This means that Excel might always be loaded in the exact same memory area. Therefore when the bit-error occurs, it is always excel that gets it. Excel will crash. Or excel will crash another application. Anyway, it will seem to be a single application that fails, and not related to memory. What I am sure of is that a cleanly installed Linux system should be able to compile the kernel without any errors. Certainly no sig-11 ones. (** Exception: Red Hat 5.0 with a Cyrix processor. See elsewhere. **) Really Linux and gcc stress your hardware more than other OSes. If you need a non-linux thingy that stresses your hardware to the point of crashing, you can try winstone. -- Jonathan Bright (bright@informix.com) _________________________________________________________________ QUESTION Is it always signal 11? ANSWER Nope. Other signals like four, six and seven also occur occasionally. Signal 11 is most common though. As long as memory is getting corrupted, anything can happen. I'd expect bad binaries to occur much more often than they really do. Anyway, it seems that the odds are heavily biased towards gcc getting a signal 11. Also seen: * free_one_pmd: bad directory entry 00000008 * EXT2-fs warning (device 08:14): ext_2_free_blocks bit already cleared for block 127916 * Internal error: bad swap device * Trying to free nonexistent swap-page * kfree of non-kmalloced memory ... * scsi0: REQ before WAIT DISCONNECT IID * Unable to handle kernel NULL pointer dereference at virtual address c0000004 * put_page: page already exists 00000046 invalid operand: 0000 * Whee.. inode changed from under us. Tell Linus * crc error -- System halted (During the uncompress of the Linux kernel) * Segmentation fault * "unable to resolve symbol" * make [1]: *** [sub_dirs] Error 139 make: *** [linuxsubdirs] Error 1 * The X Window system can terminate with a "caught signal xx" The first few ones are cases where the kernel "suspects" a kernel-programming-error that is actually caused by the bad memory. The last few point to application programs that end up with the trouble. -- S.G.de Marinis (trance@interseg.it) -- Dirk Nachtmann (nachtman@kogs.informatik.uni-hamburg.de) _________________________________________________________________ QUESTION What do I do? ANSWER Here are some things to try when you want to find out what is wrong... note: Some of these will significantly slow your computer down. These things are intended to get your computer to function properly and allow you to narrow down what's wrong with it. With this information you can for example try to get the faulty component replaced by your vendor. * Jumper the motherboard for lower CPU and bus speed. * Go into the BIOS and tell it "Load BIOS defaults". Make sure you write the disk drive settings down beforehand. * Disable the cache (BIOS) (or pull it out if it's on a "stick"). * boot kernel with "linux mem=4M" (disables memory above 4Mb). * Try taking out half the memory. Try both halves in turn. * Fiddle with settings of the refresh (BIOS) * Try borrowing memory from someone else. Preferably this should be memory that runs Linux flawlessly in the other machine... (Sillicon graphics Indy machines are also nice targets to borrow memory from) * If you want to verify if a solution really works try the following: tcsh cd /usr/src/linux make zImage foreach i (0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9) foreach j (0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9) make clean;make zImage > log."$i"$j end end All the resulting logfiles should be the same. (The first "make zImage" makes sure that the dependencies are already generated.....) This takes around 24 hours on a 100MHz pentium with 16Mb of memory. (and about 3 months on a 386 with 4Mb :-). The hardest part is that most people will be able to do all of the above except borrowing memory from someone else, and it doesn't make a difference. This makes it likely that it really is the RAM. Currently RAM is the most pricy part of a PC, so you rather not have this conclusion, but I'm sorry, I get lots of reactions that in the end turn out to be the RAM. However don't despair just yet: your RAM may not be completely wasted: you can always try to trade it in for different or more RAM. _________________________________________________________________ QUESTION I had my RAMs tested in a RAM-tester device, and they are OK. Can't be the RAM right? ANSWER Wrong. It seems that the errors that are currently occuring in RAMS are not detectable by RAM-testers. It might be that your motherboard is accessing the RAMs in dubious ways or otherwise messing up the RAM while it is in YOUR computer. The advantage is that you can sell your RAM to someone who still has confidence in his RAM-tester...... _________________________________________________________________ QUESTION What are other possibilities? ANSWER Others have noted the following possibilities: * Red Hat 5.0 crashes for some people while installing. Others are only running into problems when compiling the kernel. It seems that the gcc that comes with Red Hat 5.0 is odd in the respect that it crashes on Cyrix processors when compiling the kernel. This is VERY odd. I would think that the only way that this can be the case is whent he Cyrix has a bug that has gone undetected all this time, and reliably gets triggered when THAT gcc compiles the Linux kernel. Anyway, if you just want compile a kernel, you should get ftp://ftp.redhat.com/home/wanger/gcc/gcc-2.7.2.3-9.i386.rpm . (I had to change the URL twice in a week. If it changes again, you'll just have to click your way to the errata at starting at http://www.redhat.com/) I don't know of a workaround if your system crashes while installing, except for installing a minimal base and then adding packages using 'glint' or 'rpm'. * Compiling a 2.0.x kernel with a 2.8.x gcc or any egcs doesn't work. There are a few bugs in the kernel that don't show up because gcc 2.7.x does a lowsy job optimizing it. gcc 2.8.x and egcs just dump some of the code because we didn't tell it not to. Anyway, you usually get a kernel that seems to work but has funny bugs. For example X may crash with a signal 11. Oh, and before you ask, no it's not going to be fixed. Don't bother Alan or Linus about this OK? -- Hans Peter Verne (h.p.verne@kjemi.uio.no) * The pentium-optimizing-gcc (the one with the version number ending in "p") fails with the default options on certain source files like floppy.c in the kernel. The "triggers" are in the kernel, libc and in gcc itself. This is easily diagnosed as "not a hardware problem" because it always happens in the same place. You can either disable some optimizations (try -fno-unroll-loops first) or use another gcc. -- Evan Cheng (evan@top.cis.syr.edu) (In other words: gcc 2.7.2p crashes with sig11 on floppy.c . Workaround-1: Use plain gcc. Workaround-2: Manually compile floppy.c with "-O" instead of "-O2". ) * A badly misconfigured gcc -- some parts from one version, some from another. After a few weeks I ended up re-installing from scratch to get everything right. -- Richard H. Derr III (rhd@Mars.mcs.com). * Gcc or the resulting application may terminate with sig11 when a program is linked against the SCO libraries (which come with iBCS). This occurs on some applications that have -L/lib in their LDFLAGS.... * When compiling a kernel with an ELF compiler, but configured for a.out (or the other way around, I forgot) you will get a signal 11 on the first call to "ld". This is easily identified as a software problem, as it always occurs on the FIRST call to "ld" during the build. -- REW * An Ethernet card together with a badly configured PCI BIOS. If your (ISA) Ethernet card has an aperture on the ISA bus, you might need to configure it somewhere in the BIOS setup screens. Otherwise the hardware would look on the PCI bus for the shared memory area. As the ISA card can't react to the requests on the PCI bus, you are reading empty "air". This can result in segmentation faults and kernel crashes. -- REW * Corrupted swap partition. Tony Nugent (T.Nugent@sct.gu.edu.au) reports he used to have this problem and solved it by an mkswap on his swap partition. (Don't forget to type "sync" before doing anything else after an mkswap. -- Louis J. LaBash Jr. (lou@minuet.siue.edu)) * NE2000 card. Some cheap Ne2000 cards might mess up the system. -- Danny ter Haar (dth@cistron.nl) I personally might have had similar problems, as my mail server crashed hard every now and then (once a day). It now seems that 1.2.13 and lots of the 1.3.x kernels have this bug. I haven't seen it in 1.3.48. Probably got fixed somewhere in the meantime.... -- REW * Power supply? No I don't think so. A modern heavy system with two or three harddisk, both SCSI and IDE will not exceed 120 Watts or so. If you have loads of old harddisks and old expansion cards the power requirements will be higher, but still it is very hard to reach the limits of the power supply. Of course some people manage to find loads of old full-size harddisks and install them into their big-tower. You can indeed overload a powersupply that way. -- Greg Nicholson (greg@job.cba.ua.edu) A faulty power supply CAN of course deliver marginal power, which causes all of the malfunctioning that you read about in this file.... -- Thorsten Kuehnemann (thorsten@actis.de) * An inconsistent ext2fs. Some circumstances can cause the kernel code of the ext2 file system to result in Signal 11 for Gcc. -- Morten Welinder (terra@diku.dk) * CMOS battery. Even if you set the BIOS as you want it, it could be changing back to "bad" settings under your nose if the CMOS battery is bad. -- Heonmin Lim (coco@me.umn.edu) * No or too little swap space. Gcc doesn't gracefully handle the "out of memory" condition. -- Paul Brannan (brannanp@musc.edu) * Incompatible libraries. When you have a symlink from "libc.so.5" pointing to "libc.so.6", some applications will bomb with sig11. -- Piete Brooks (piete.brooks@cl.cam.ac.uk). _________________________________________________________________ QUESTION I don't believe this. To whom has this happened? ANSWER Well for one it happened to me personally. But you don't have to believe me. It also happened to: * Johnny Stephens (icjps@asuvm.inre.asu.edu) * Dejan Ilic (d92dejil@und.ida.liu.se) * Rick Tessner (rick@myra.com) * David Fox (fox@graphics.cs.nyu.edu) * Darren White (dwhite@baker.cnw.com) (L2 cache) * Patrick J. Volkerding (volkerdi@mhd1.moorhead.msus.edu) * Jeff Coy Jr. (jcoy@gray.cscwc.pima.edu) (Temp problems) * Michael Blandford (mikey@azalea.lanl.gov) (Temp problems: CPU fan failed) * Alex Butcher (Alex.Butcher@bristol.ac.uk) (Memory waitstates) * Richard Postgate (postgate@cafe.net) (VLB loading) * Bert Meijs (L.Meijs@et.tudelft.nl) (bad SIMMs) * J. Van Stonecypher (scypher@cs.fsu.edu) * Mark Kettner (kettner@cat.et.tudelft.nl) (bad SIMMs) * Naresh Sharma (n.sharma@is.twi.tudelft.nl) (30->72 converter) * Rick Lim (ricklim@freenet.vancouver.bc.ca) (Bad cache) * Scott Brumbaugh (scottb@borris.beachnet.com) * Paul Gortmaker (paul.gortmaker@anu.edu.au) * Mike Tayter (tayter@ncats.newaygo.mi.us) (Something with the cache) * Benni ??? (benni@informatik.uni-frankfurt.de) (VLB Overloading) * Oliver Schoett (os@sdm.de) (Cache jumper) * Morten Welinder (terra@diku.dk) * Warwick Harvey (warwick@cs.mu.oz.au) (bit error in cache) * Hank Barta (hank@pswin.chi.il.us) * Jeffrey J. Radice (jjr@zilker.net) (Ram voltage) * Samuel Ramac (sramac@vnet.ibm.com) (CPU tops out) * Andrew Eskilsson (mpt95aes@pt.hk-r.se) (DRAM speed) * W. Paul Mills (wpmills@midusa.net) (CPU fan disconnected from CPU) * Joseph Barone (barone@mntr02.psf.ge.com) (Bad cache) * Philippe Troin (ptroin@compass-da.com) (delayed RAM timing trouble) * Koen D'Hondt (koen@dutlhs1.lr.tudelft.nl) (more kernel error messages) * Bill Faust (faust@pobox.com) (cache problem) * Tim Middlekoop (mtim@lab.housing.fsu.edu) (CPU temp: fan installed) * Andrew R. Cook (andy@anchtk.chm.anl.gov) (bad cache) * Allan Wind (wind@imada.ou.dk) (P66 overheating) * Michael Tuschik (mt2@irz.inf.tu-dresden.de) (gcc2.7.2p victim) * R.C.H. Li (chli@en.polyu.edu.hk) (Overclocking: ok for months...) * Florin (florin@monet.telebyte.nl) (Overclocked CPU by vendor) * Dale J March (dmarch@pcocd2.intel.com) (CPU overheating on laptop) * Markus Schulte (markus@dom.de) (Bad RAM) * Mark Davis (mark_d_davis@usa.pipeline.com) (Bad P120?) * Josep Lladonosa i Capell (jllado@arrakis.es) (PCI options overoptimization) * Emilio Federici (mc9995@mclink.it) (P120 overheating) * Conor McCarthy (conormc@cclana.ucd.ie) (Bad SIMM) * Matthias Petofalvi (mpetofal@ulb.ac.be) ("Simmverter" problem) * Jonathan Christopher Mckinney (jono@tamu.edu) (gcc2.7.2p victim) * Greg Nicholson (greg@job.cba.ua.edu) (many old disks) * Ismo Peltonen (iap@bigbang.hut.fi) (irq_unmasking) * Daniel Pancamo (pancamo@infocom.net) (70ns instead of 60 ns RAM) * David Halls (david.halls@cl.cam.ac.uk) * Mark Zusman (marklz@pointer.israel.net) (Bad motherboard) * Elizabeth Ayer (eca23@cam.ac.uk) (Power management features) * Thorsten Kuehnemann (thorsten@actis.de) * * (Email me with your story, you might get to be mentioned here... :-) ---- Update: I like to hear what happened to you. This will allow me to guess what happens most, and keep this file as accurate as possible. However I now have around 500 different Email addresses of people who've had sig-11 problems. I don't think that it is useful to keep on adding "random" people's names on this list. What do YOU think? _________________________________________________________________ I'm interested in new stories. If you have a problem and are unsure about what it is, it may help to Email me at R.E.Wolff@BitWizard.nl . My curiosity will usually drive me to answering your questions until you find what the problem is..... (on the other hand, I do get pissed when your problem is clearly described above :-) _________________________________________________________________ This page is hosted by www.bitwizard.nl _________________________________________________________________