• Strange crash of Kernel(?)

    From William Unruh@2:250/1 to All on Sat May 22 17:13:55 2021
    This morning while running Zoom, I got a weird crash of the kernel(?) or something. The desktop and zoom window were there. sound was coming out
    of the speakers, but it was in a loop. Ie, it was about 1-2 sec of sound
    of sound and of video of the zoom were coming out but just looping.
    There was no mouse cursor, and the keyboard was unresponsive. When
    finally hit the big red switch, the system rebooted to a blank screen.
    It only unblanked when I switched off and then on again the screen (Dell touchscreen). This is a desktop machine. While the looping was going on,
    the network connection was gone, or at least I could not get any response from another computer
    trying to connect.

    Mageia 8 updated.

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    * Origin: A noiseless patient Spider (2:250/1@fidonet)
  • From Aragorn@2:250/1 to All on Sat May 22 17:39:32 2021
    On 22.05.2021 at 16:13, William Unruh scribbled:

    This morning while running Zoom, I got a weird crash of the kernel(?)
    or something. The desktop and zoom window were there. sound was
    coming out of the speakers, but it was in a loop. Ie, it was about
    1-2 sec of sound of sound and of video of the zoom were coming out
    but just looping. There was no mouse cursor, and the keyboard was unresponsive. When finally hit the big red switch, the system
    rebooted to a blank screen. It only unblanked when I switched off and
    then on again the screen (Dell touchscreen). This is a desktop
    machine. While the looping was going on, the network connection was
    gone, or at least I could not get any response from another computer
    trying to connect.

    Mageia 8 updated.

    Proprietary Nvidia driver?

    --
    With respect,
    = Aragorn =


    --- MBSE BBS v1.0.7.21 (GNU/Linux-x86_64)
    * Origin: A noiseless patient Strider (2:250/1@fidonet)
  • From William Unruh@2:250/1 to All on Sat May 22 17:45:49 2021
    On 2021-05-22, Aragorn <thorongil@telenet.be> wrote:
    On 22.05.2021 at 16:13, William Unruh scribbled:

    This morning while running Zoom, I got a weird crash of the kernel(?)
    or something. The desktop and zoom window were there. sound was
    coming out of the speakers, but it was in a loop. Ie, it was about
    1-2 sec of sound of sound and of video of the zoom were coming out
    but just looping. There was no mouse cursor, and the keyboard was
    unresponsive. When finally hit the big red switch, the system
    rebooted to a blank screen. It only unblanked when I switched off and
    then on again the screen (Dell touchscreen). This is a desktop
    machine. While the looping was going on, the network connection was
    gone, or at least I could not get any response from another computer
    trying to connect.

    Mageia 8 updated.

    Proprietary Nvidia driver?

    Nope, Intel driver

    inxi -AG
    Graphics: Device-1: Intel CoffeeLake-S GT2 [UHD Graphics 630] driver: i915 v: kernel
    Display: server: Mageia X.org 1.20.11 driver: intel,v4l resolution: 1920x1080~60Hz
    OpenGL: renderer: Mesa Intel UHD Graphics 630 (CFL GT2) v: 4.6 Mesa 21.0.2
    Audio: Device-1: Intel Cannon Lake PCH cAVS driver: snd_hda_intel
    Device-2: Logitech Webcam C930e type: USB driver: snd-usb-audio,uvcvideo
    Sound Server: ALSA v: k5.10.33-desktop-1.mga8



    --- MBSE BBS v1.0.7.21 (GNU/Linux-x86_64)
    * Origin: A noiseless patient Spider (2:250/1@fidonet)
  • From Aragorn@2:250/1 to All on Sat May 22 18:47:47 2021
    On 22.05.2021 at 16:45, William Unruh scribbled:

    On 2021-05-22, Aragorn <thorongil@telenet.be> wrote:
    On 22.05.2021 at 16:13, William Unruh scribbled:
    =20
    This morning while running Zoom, I got a weird crash of the
    kernel(?) or something. The desktop and zoom window were there.
    sound was coming out of the speakers, but it was in a loop. Ie, it
    was about 1-2 sec of sound of sound and of video of the zoom were
    coming out but just looping. There was no mouse cursor, and the
    keyboard was unresponsive. When finally hit the big red switch,
    the system rebooted to a blank screen. It only unblanked when I
    switched off and then on again the screen (Dell touchscreen). This
    is a desktop machine. While the looping was going on, the network
    connection was gone, or at least I could not get any response from
    another computer trying to connect.=20
    =20
    Mageia 8 updated. =20

    Proprietary Nvidia driver? =20
    =20
    Nope, Intel driver
    =20
    inxi -AG
    Graphics: Device-1: Intel CoffeeLake-S GT2 [UHD Graphics 630]
    driver: i915 v: kernel Display: server: Mageia X.org 1.20.11 driver: intel,v4l resolution: 1920x1080~60Hz OpenGL: renderer: Mesa Intel UHD Graphics 630 (CFL GT2) v: 4.6 Mesa 21.0.2 Audio: Device-1: Intel
    Cannon Lake PCH cAVS driver: snd_hda_intel Device-2: Logitech Webcam
    C930e type: USB driver: snd-usb-audio,uvcvideo Sound Server: ALSA v: k5.10.33-desktop-1.mga8

    My educated guess would be that Zoom hit a bug in the v4l subsystem.

    I've seen a similar thing happen on my previous desktop machine, which
    was a refurbished box, but in that case it was a hardware issue. Its
    PSU wasn't supplying enough juice anymore to the onboard GPU, which
    itself was also dying. =20

    But the looping sound was also typical there =E2=80=94 at least, for a numb=
    er
    of seconds, and then it would stop because by then the system had
    completely crashed and I had to hit the big red button. (Actually, it
    was lit by a blue LED, with another red LED for drive activity built
    into the same button, but anyway. :p)

    --=20
    With respect,
    =3D Aragorn =3D


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    * Origin: A noiseless patient Strider (2:250/1@fidonet)
  • From Bit Twister@2:250/1 to All on Sat May 22 20:23:59 2021
    On Sat, 22 May 2021 16:13:55 -0000 (UTC), William Unruh wrote:
    This morning while running Zoom,

    I'll assume latest zoom installed

    $ rpm -qa "zoom*"
    zoom-5.6.16888.0424-1


    I got a weird crash of the kernel(?) or something.

    I would suggest that you might want to enable core dump that way
    you have a better chance of alt least knowing who crashed.

    Snippet from my brain book
    $ uh core dump
    _enable_core_dump_ sysctl -w kernel.core_uses_pid=1
    _enable_core_dump_ sysctl -w fs.suid_dumpable=2
    _enable_core_dump_
    sysctl -w kernel.core_pattern="/core/%e_%t_%s_uid%u.core" _enable_core_dumps01_ ulimit -c unlimited
    _enable_core_dumps02_ echo 1 > /proc/sys/kernel/core_uses_pid _enable_core_dumps03_ echo "%e_%p_%s.core" > /proc/sys/kernel/core_pattern

    Since I automate those kinds of changes there is this snippet
    from sysctl_conf_changes:

    _xx_fn=/etc/sysctl.d/xx__sysctl.conf

    cat > $_xx_fn <<EOD
    # enable System Request debugging functionality of the kernel
    kernel.sysrq = 1

    # Enabling suid dump PID appending and set core location and name

    kernel.core_uses_pid = 1
    kernel.core_pattern = /var/tmp/%e_%p_%s.core
    fs.suid_dumpable = 2
    EOD
    echo "#******** end $_xx_fn *************" >> $_xx_fn
    echo "Created $_xx_fn"
    sysctl --system
    sysctl --system --write



    User login needs to set ulimit
    user_home_setup: ulimit -c unlimited # The maximum size of core files

    Since I run xterm, I find it handy to always check for core files
    via ~/.bashrc

    $ cat /local/bin/ck_4_core
    #!/bin/bash
    #*************************************************************
    #* ck_4_core - Check for any core files
    #*
    #* Usually called from ~/.bashrc
    #*
    #*************************************************************
    for _d in $HOME /tmp /var/tmp /var/lib/systemd/coredump ; do
    _cnt=$(ls $_d/*core* 2> /dev/null | wc -l)
    if [ $_cnt -gt 0 ] ; then
    echo " "
    ls -hla $_d/*core*
    echo "
    # from $(hostname --short) ck_4_core
    # There is a $_d/*core file. To remove it, run
    rm --force $_d/*core*

    exit 0


    "
    fi
    done

    #*************** end ck_4_core ****************************************


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    * Origin: A noiseless patient Spider (2:250/1@fidonet)
  • From William Unruh@2:250/1 to All on Sat May 22 22:59:10 2021
    On 2021-05-22, Aragorn <thorongil@telenet.be> wrote:
    On 22.05.2021 at 16:45, William Unruh scribbled:

    On 2021-05-22, Aragorn <thorongil@telenet.be> wrote:
    On 22.05.2021 at 16:13, William Unruh scribbled:

    ....

    My educated guess would be that Zoom hit a bug in the v4l subsystem.

    I've seen a similar thing happen on my previous desktop machine, which
    was a refurbished box, but in that case it was a hardware issue. Its
    PSU wasn't supplying enough juice anymore to the onboard GPU, which
    itself was also dying.

    But the looping sound was also typical there — at least, for a number
    of seconds, and then it would stop because by then the system had
    completely crashed and I had to hit the big red button. (Actually, it
    was lit by a blue LED, with another red LED for drive activity built
    into the same button, but anyway. :p)

    In my case the looping went on "forever" (well >5min.) There was no
    response to any external probes on the network. There was no response to anything I did on the keyboard. The strange thing was that when i
    finally hit the switch and tried to reboot, the light on the computer
    came on, but nothing showed onthe screen. I tried a couple of times, and finally switched off the monitor and switched it back on, and suddenly
    the boot process showed up on the screen (I always run my machine with
    no quiet and no splash on the boot). Very strange that it managed to
    switch off the screen on boot. (the screen was still showing the loop
    before I switched off the computer).

    It seems to be running fine now.




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    * Origin: A noiseless patient Spider (2:250/1@fidonet)
  • From Grimble@2:250/1 to All on Sun May 23 12:01:15 2021
    On 22/05/2021 17:13, William Unruh wrote:
    This morning while running Zoom, I got a weird crash of the kernel(?) or something. The desktop and zoom window were there. sound was coming out
    of the speakers, but it was in a loop. Ie, it was about 1-2 sec of sound
    of sound and of video of the zoom were coming out but just looping.
    There was no mouse cursor, and the keyboard was unresponsive. When
    finally hit the big red switch, the system rebooted to a blank screen.
    It only unblanked when I switched off and then on again the screen (Dell touchscreen). This is a desktop machine. While the looping was going on,
    the network connection was gone, or at least I could not get any response from another computer
    trying to connect.

    Mageia 8 updated.

    That's interesting. That's happened twice to me, listening to internet
    radio through Chrome, 2 seconds of looping sound. Little blue button
    required. nVidia card (GE 710) and presumably nVidia driver, because I
    would have answered Yes to the "proprietary driver" option during installation. PC is less than a month old. Other problems found include
    Chrome segfaulting twice, various unexplained system halts with nothing obvious in syslog at the moment of stoppage. Eventually ran memtest, and
    found problems in both my memory modules, which have now gone back to
    the supplier for replacement.

    --
    Grimble
    Registered Linux User #450547
    Machine 'Bach' running Plasma 5.20.4 on 5.10.37-desktop-2.mga8 kernel.
    Mageia release 8 (Official) for x86_64

    --- MBSE BBS v1.0.7.22 (GNU/Linux-x86_64)
    * Origin: A noiseless patient Spider (2:250/1@fidonet)