Unfortunately, debugging the problem is rather difficult, as there is no kernel panic on the screen, nor anything in the logs. It's a VIA motherboard/processor, and it's used as an MP3 jukebox. When it freezes, it literally freezes all of the sudden. If the music is playing at the time, the music just goes into an endless stutter (like when a CD has a big scratch and keeps repeating the same short clip of audio over and over again). The machine didn't have this problem when we were running this particular kernel, and so I want to give it a try to eliminate the possibility that something changed in newer kernels that would cause this. It could very well be some other problem, but I have to go back to what I know what did work before I can deduce if the problem lies elsewhere. Patrick On 5/2/06, Karl F. Larsen <k5di@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
patrick wrote: > I'm wondering if it's possible to get older versions of kernels > anywhere? Specifically, I'm looking for and i386 version of > 2.6.13-1.1526_FC4. I have some machines that worked best with this > particular kernel, and I sadly do not have it anymore (I had to > reinstall, and this kernel wasn't the most recent when I did a "yum > update".) All of the more recent kernels I've tried seem to cause the > machine to eventually freeze when left running. > Hi you don't say what linux you are using but the computer is a pc. The kernel you seem to want is a FC4 kernel and I do not see any problem getting it. But I suggest you have something else wrong with your system. If you know your system is crashing due to kernel panic then there might be something to be done. Karl > Patrick > -- fedora-list mailing list fedora-list@xxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe: https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-list
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