Hi Dave, Thanks, yes it is a 32GB configuration. Based on my dump here, (which was a kernel pages only dump),it is indeed missing that memory address at the end of the list. The last address is 82fffe000. I forced the dump for DLM lock problem which I understand and was able to research, but the SLAB stuff has never worked for me on SLES 9. This may just be a bug with lkcd. I never have these problems on Redhat with kdump. I will test it on a SLES 11 running kdump and see what happens crash> kmem -p | tail 1001da7fd98 82fff5000 0 0 0 1000080 1001da7fdd0 82fff6000 0 0 0 1000080 1001da7fe08 82fff7000 0 0 0 1000080 1001da7fe40 82fff8000 0 0 0 1000080 1001da7fe78 82fff9000 0 0 0 1000080 1001da7feb0 82fffa000 0 0 0 1000080 1001da7fee8 82fffb000 0 0 0 1000080 1001da7ff20 82fffc000 0 0 0 1000080 1001da7ff58 82fffd000 0 0 0 1000080 1001da7ff90 82fffe000 0 0 0 1000080 crash> sys SYSTEM MAP: map.0 DEBUG KERNEL: vmlinux (2.6.5-7.244-smp) DUMPFILE: dump.0 CPUS: 4 DATE: Sat Feb 6 12:43:37 2010 UPTIME: 213503982289 days, 20:38:24 LOAD AVERAGE: 260.75, 259.77, 258.95 TASKS: 1167 NODENAME: linuscs73 RELEASE: 2.6.5-7.252-smp VERSION: #2 SMP Mon Jun 22 13:11:57 PDT 2009 MACHINE: x86_64 (2666 Mhz) MEMORY: 32.7 GB PANIC: "manual" crash> The "seek error" indicates that the kmem slab page associated with virtual address 1082fffea00, which is unity-mapped to physical address 82fffea00, could not be found in the dump.0 file. If we presume that it is a "correct" address, physical address 82fffea00 is *very* close to the end of physical memory on that system, which shows "32.7 GB". If you enter: crash> kmem -p | tail and wait a while because of the size of the dump, it will eventually dump the end of the system's mem_map array of physical pages, where the second column in the list contains the physical address. I only have one SLES9 (2.6.5-7.315-smp) dumpfile example, which is a 16GB dumpfile, and the output looks like this: crash> kmem -p | tail 10407efdd98 407ff5000 0 0 0 d000080 10407efddd0 407ff6000 0 0 0 d000080 10407efde08 407ff7000 0 0 0 d000080 10407efde40 407ff8000 0 0 0 d000080 10407efde78 407ff9000 0 0 0 d000080 10407efdeb0 407ffa000 0 0 0 d000080 10407efdee8 407ffb000 0 0 0 d000080 10407efdf20 407ffc000 0 0 0 d000080 10407efdf58 407ffd000 0 0 0 d000080 10407efdf90 407ffe000 0 0 0 d000080 crash> where 407ffe000 is the last page of physical memory on the system. If you do the same thing, how does the last physical page compare to 82fffea00? Dave output looks like this -- Crash-utility mailing list Crash-utility@xxxxxxxxxx https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/crash-utility -- Crash-utility mailing list Crash-utility@xxxxxxxxxx https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/crash-utility