Re: how can a bit be off in memory?
- From: "Charles T. Smith" <cts.private@xxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Sat, 30 Jun 2007 16:37:41 +0200
On Sat, 30 Jun 2007 11:42:12 +0000, spike1 wrote:
Charles T. Smith <cts.private@xxxxxxxxx> did eloquently scribble:
On Sat, 30 Jun 2007 08:16:41 +0000, spike1 wrote:
ray <ray@xxxxxxxxxx> did eloquently scribble:
On Fri, 29 Jun 2007 23:58:48 +0200, Charles T. Smith wrote:
Vim started crashing on me, particularly when I tried to open new
lines. I finally checked it out with rpm and a newly downloaded copy
of vim's rpm and discovered that exactly one byte, deep into vim, was
wrong.
I rebooted my machine (which has been super-solid for years) - and
the difference was gone.
So, what are the opinions - did I run into a hardware glich, or was
there a freaky issue with memory mapping?
I think I'd run 'badblocks' on the disk.
Or turn swap off and remake it with -c?
Remake what with -c? I don't see a -c option with swapon().
I said reMAKE, not turn it on again
mkswap
-c Check the device (if it is a block device) for bad blocks before
creating the swap area. If any are found, the count is printed.
Oh, you mean the swap partition?
Hmmm. You mean you think executable images get swapped out?
.
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