tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-29795545.post2504424129813568281..comments2023-05-22T11:51:03.791+02:00Comments on My daily work with SQL Server and Microsoft products.: Segmentation fault on Ubuntu 9.10 Server under Windows 7 x64 Virtual PCJ.A.http://www.blogger.com/profile/12443903580942822247noreply@blogger.comBlogger11125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-29795545.post-10776317240219464512012-07-07T18:12:37.353+02:002012-07-07T18:12:37.353+02:001024MB worked for me as well. Thanks!1024MB worked for me as well. Thanks!Brian Kleinhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/17801122353282572492noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-29795545.post-86755321059980035482012-01-16T13:46:06.086+01:002012-01-16T13:46:06.086+01:00Thanks, with Nagios i change the memory to 1024 an...Thanks, with Nagios i change the memory to 1024 and now work fine.<br /><br />Regards,<br />mpatrixmpatrixnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-29795545.post-19116766455081675902011-10-12T16:09:50.257+02:002011-10-12T16:09:50.257+02:00I have the same thing for a virtual PC downloaded ...I have the same thing for a virtual PC downloaded at Nagios for Nagios XI. <br />The "Segmentation fault" was repeating on and on.<br /><br />I have raised the memory from 768 to 1024 as suggest in one of the comments above and it corrected my problem.Simon L-Deslauriershttps://www.blogger.com/profile/05293590883367174076noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-29795545.post-80134930855013785552011-03-03T12:29:15.200+01:002011-03-03T12:29:15.200+01:00noreplace-paravirt i8042.noloop clock=pitnoreplace-paravirt i8042.noloop clock=pitAnonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-29795545.post-6278819346032469472010-03-18T03:00:07.052+01:002010-03-18T03:00:07.052+01:00after reading your comments, im allmost sure it ha...after reading your comments, im allmost sure it has something to do with swap partition and virtual memory, since increasing the memory of that virtual machine postpones ubuntuĀ“s need to write something to swap/cache/virtual-memory (what ever it is called in linux enviroment) it will postpone the segmentation fault error aswell, im sure that increasing the memory size of that virtual machine isnt a real solution to that problem eventho it looks like it worksAnonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-29795545.post-66947570390333412612010-03-06T14:37:05.761+01:002010-03-06T14:37:05.761+01:00Same symptoms...bumping memory to 1024 worked for ...Same symptoms...bumping memory to 1024 worked for me as wellAnonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-29795545.post-11516311155387308272009-12-11T09:30:10.027+01:002009-12-11T09:30:10.027+01:00Thanks a lot, guys.
I have an intel board PC and ...Thanks a lot, guys.<br /><br />I have an intel board PC and I disabled Security->XD Technology in my bios. Then, ubuntu 9.10 works very good with only 256M RAM. (Only with the "vga=791 noreplace-paravirt" trick)<br /><br />I've also tested with 1G RAM setting with XD enabled. The recovery mode booted well but gnome launched with too many glitches.<br /><br />I'm using ubuntu 9.04 on VPC since it runs very well in Windows 7. I've tried to install 9.10 many times with no success. I agree that changing bios setting is not safe, but now I at least satisfied with the fact that there is a way! Thanks.shevioushttp://google.comnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-29795545.post-87865436581036601152009-12-06T00:07:35.501+01:002009-12-06T00:07:35.501+01:00I'm right after your steps... and agree with y...I'm right after your steps... and agree with you again. Even thought I can now login, I cannot even install telnetd, much less ubuntu-desktop. I get segmentation faults everywhere whenever I do a sudo apt-get install whatever.<br /><br />Have you tried to turn off your eXecute Disable bit on your BIOS? It might be, after all, that this is the only working option.J.A.https://www.blogger.com/profile/12443903580942822247noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-29795545.post-84740084167596961822009-12-05T19:30:52.408+01:002009-12-05T19:30:52.408+01:00I agree with you. There is definitely something w...I agree with you. There is definitely something wrong in the memory management subsystem. Ubuntu 9.10 *should* run in < 400M. After the bump to 1024, I was able to login, -- but no apps would run and Gnome started to complain (didn't notice this until after my first post). I did an xterm login and found the messages log full of sigseg violations. Simple commands like 'df' and 'find' would only randomly function. After another 512M bump, I have a fully functional Gnome desktop. Ubuntu 9.10 would *never* need this much memory in its own physical box. I hope they are working on this one. This has much potential.Unknownhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/01192669905297923485noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-29795545.post-12991925268369549002009-12-05T10:32:50.975+01:002009-12-05T10:32:50.975+01:00You're right. No hassles, no risks, simply bri...You're right. No hassles, no risks, simply brilliant. However, despite this 'workaround' of adding more ram to the VM, there must be something wrong with the memory management in Virtual PC bundled with Windows 7.J.A.https://www.blogger.com/profile/12443903580942822247noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-29795545.post-19185691410010931992009-12-04T20:33:36.649+01:002009-12-04T20:33:36.649+01:00I had exactly the same issue until I bumped the me...I had exactly the same issue until I bumped the memory to 1024M instead of the default 512 for the Virtual Machine. Looks good so far. Just logged in with no errors after a clean boot of 9.10.Unknownhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/01192669905297923485noreply@blogger.com