On Thu, Oct 17, 2024 at 3:04 AM onefang <onefang_devuan@???> wrote:
>
> On 2024-09-28 21:20:50, o1bigtenor via Dng wrote:
> > On Sat, Sep 28, 2024 at 8:15 PM nick <[1]nick@???> wrote:
> >
> > It's definitely a dream system. I would still suspect it though. My
> > reasoning would be somewhat like this:
> > 1. Random lockups are not normal and shouldn't be happening.
> > 2. The cause has gotta be either hardware or software.
> > 3. If it's hardware it's gotta be one (or more) specific component that
> > is failing, defined by if I replaced that component with an identical
> > unit (of the same manufacturer and model) the problem would go away.
> > 4. If it's software it's gotta be a subtle bug or driver
> > incompatibility, sometimes latent bugs can be triggered by unusual
> > combinations eg. Let us say the driver for your AMD graphics card fails
> > when there is 64 GB or more of RAM, just for the sake of example.
> > 5. It could also be a matter of settings or configuration eg if your
> > BIOS has configured the RAM for a higher clock than it is specced for,
> > although in this era of autoconfiguration this would probably count as a
> > driver bug.
> > What I would do as a starting point would be to pull out the GPU and
> > half the RAM and use it for a few weeks to see if problem goes away.
> > Does it have internal graphics or do you have an older GPU to use
> > temporarily? If problem recurs swap the RAM for the other half and
> > re-test. You can also try the GPU or RAM in another system to see if
> > problem moves with it. If it turns out to be the GPU then it could be
> > driver issue as drivers are very complex these days. You could try
> > earlier driver or earlier kernel (as you are already doing) but such
> > approach is fraught. Once you narrow down the issue to a specific part
> > or driver its better to take it out of service until a new part or fix
> > is available.
> > In principle you can use the same approach to diagnose CPU or mobo
> > issue, but you would need identical spares which could get costly. If
> > buying spares for testing I would highly recommend to get a PSU first. I
> > haven't been into system building for many years but I have heard that
> > PSU is responsible for a large proportion of faults with modern rigs
> > given how demanding they are on the PSU.
> > I am sure you can solve this. The nightmare is when it happens on a
> > laptop where you really have no option but to try earlier kernels or
> > removing drivers or take the laptop out of service (has happened to me).
> > On a PC it is much easier. Oh yeah another thought: you might try
> > running the dreaded Windows on it for a while. If it still locks up you
> > have eliminated software except possibly for common code in AMD display
> > drivers.
> >
> > Given that when I had all four browsers loaded the uptime shrank horribly
> > and my peripheral knowledge of the
> > desire of far too many companies to use javascript to do things and report
> > back to them what they want to know
> > I am far more likely to suspect software than hardware.
> > Just like right now - - I am still stuck at the dredded mz googly's email
> > system and right now ublock origin is
> > telling me that the are some 115 domains linked in. (Now up to 120
> > domains. Now up to 137!!!!)
> > This kind of garbage is likely at the bottom of my issues - - - not that
> > hardware can't be an issue but
> > when hardware is manipulated by unscrupulous companies - - - well the
> > results are issues for users.
> > Sorry - - - I have no spare GPU and I don't know another currently
> > available one that has 5 outputs
> > so that's a doa issue already.
> > I guess what I'm looking for - - - well maybe I need to setup that shared
> > hosting setup that I have been thinking
> > about and get mz googly off my neck. Then if I can find a way to jail any
> > and all browsers then I think my
> > hardware issues would like shrink mightily.
> > Any suggestions on how I can jail any browser?
>
> Hardcore way - run them in a VM.
>
I tried lxd some time ago and as a result am quite gun shy to even the idea of
using VMs.
What particular form of VM are you espousing?
TIA