Pavel Machek | 2884f00 | 2008-11-26 17:15:21 +0100 | [diff] [blame] | 1 | March 2008 |
| 2 | Jan-Simon Moeller, dl9pf@gmx.de |
| 3 | |
| 4 | |
| 5 | How to deal with bad memory e.g. reported by memtest86+ ? |
| 6 | ######################################################### |
| 7 | |
| 8 | There are three possibilities I know of: |
| 9 | |
| 10 | 1) Reinsert/swap the memory modules |
| 11 | |
| 12 | 2) Buy new modules (best!) or try to exchange the memory |
| 13 | if you have spare-parts |
| 14 | |
| 15 | 3) Use BadRAM or memmap |
| 16 | |
| 17 | This Howto is about number 3) . |
| 18 | |
| 19 | |
| 20 | BadRAM |
| 21 | ###### |
| 22 | BadRAM is the actively developed and available as kernel-patch |
| 23 | here: http://rick.vanrein.org/linux/badram/ |
| 24 | |
| 25 | For more details see the BadRAM documentation. |
| 26 | |
| 27 | memmap |
| 28 | ###### |
| 29 | |
| 30 | memmap is already in the kernel and usable as kernel-parameter at |
| 31 | boot-time. Its syntax is slightly strange and you may need to |
| 32 | calculate the values by yourself! |
| 33 | |
| 34 | Syntax to exclude a memory area (see kernel-parameters.txt for details): |
| 35 | memmap=<size>$<address> |
| 36 | |
| 37 | Example: memtest86+ reported here errors at address 0x18691458, 0x18698424 and |
| 38 | some others. All had 0x1869xxxx in common, so I chose a pattern of |
| 39 | 0x18690000,0xffff0000. |
| 40 | |
| 41 | With the numbers of the example above: |
| 42 | memmap=64K$0x18690000 |
| 43 | or |
| 44 | memmap=0x10000$0x18690000 |
| 45 | |