Re: 2.4.19 BUG in page_alloc.c:91

Ingo Saitz (Ingo.Saitz@stud.uni-hannover.de)
Wed, 14 Aug 2002 17:19:29 +0200


I got the same bug this morning. Untainted 2.4.19 vanilla kernel.
I just noticed it because my kernel was creating Zombies ~10 hours
later.

My system: Debian unstable, P2 Celeron (Mendocino), ext3, bttv card,
lirc 0.6.5 and ati.2 driver from gatos.sf.net installed (does not
require kernel modules).

Aug 14 05:42:31 pinguin kernel: kernel BUG at page_alloc.c:91!
Aug 14 05:42:31 pinguin kernel: invalid operand: 0000
Aug 14 05:42:31 pinguin kernel: CPU: 0
Aug 14 05:42:31 pinguin kernel: EIP: 0010:[__free_pages_ok+45/612] Not tainted
Aug 14 05:42:31 pinguin kernel: EFLAGS: 00010282
Aug 14 05:42:31 pinguin kernel: eax: c1301bc0 ebx: c100ffdc ecx: c100ffdc edx: c02cfc40
Aug 14 05:42:31 pinguin kernel: esi: 00000000 edi: 00000011 ebp: 00000200 esp: c15c7f18
Aug 14 05:42:31 pinguin kernel: ds: 0018 es: 0018 ss: 0018
Aug 14 05:42:31 pinguin kernel: Process kswapd (pid: 5, stackpage=c15c7000)
Aug 14 05:42:31 pinguin kernel: Stack: d3bfb620 c100ffdc 00000011 00000200 c01350dc c100ffdc 000001d0 00000011
Aug 14 05:42:31 pinguin kernel: 00000200 c013365c d3bfb620 c100ffdc c012b652 c012c583 c012b68b 00000020
Aug 14 05:42:31 pinguin kernel: 000001d0 00000020 00000006 00000006 c15c6000 00002a19 000001d0 c02cfdd4
Aug 14 05:42:31 pinguin kernel: Call Trace: [try_to_free_buffers+144/228] [try_to_release_page+68/72] [shrink_cache+474/748] [__free_pages+27/28] [shrink_cache+531/748]
Aug 14 05:42:31 pinguin kernel: [shrink_caches+88/128] [try_to_free_pages+55/88] [kswapd_balance_pgdat+67/140] [kswapd_balance+18/40] [kswapd+153/188] [kernel_thread+40/56]
Aug 14 05:42:31 pinguin kernel:
Aug 14 05:42:31 pinguin kernel: Code: 0f 0b 5b 00 d3 b3 27 c0 89 d8 2b 05 b0 14 33 c0 69 c0 a3 8b

Ingo

-- 
echo "I love  windows" | tr wisd \\buxi
-
To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-kernel" in
the body of a message to majordomo@vger.kernel.org
More majordomo info at  http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html
Please read the FAQ at  http://www.tux.org/lkml/