how to fix system freeze

Asked by David Cox

When the computer hp 4600 has been on for about an hour it stops responding. It will not respond to keyboard or mouse commands. I must force shutdown by holding off key. I am running Ubuntu Intrepid

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David Cox (davcox48) said :
#1

right after posting this the system started to freeze. That is it was starting to become unresponsive. I could still move the cursor. When the system totally freezes I can not more the cursor. I used control alt backspace and the system restarted. A friend suggested this to me. I am new to ubuntu. I not even sure what control alt bksp does... something like do over. I still do not know why my system freezes.

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Charles Profitt (cprofitt) said :
#2

cntl+alt+bkspc = restart of the x-server (xorg) which is the graphical part of the server.

Can you post the results on an:

lspci | grep VGA

Thanks.

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David Cox (davcox48) said :
#3

PrivateVoid wrote

Can you post the results on an:

lspci | grep VGA

Thanks

I don't know how to do that. What are the steps I should take?

Thank you for responding.

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David Cox (davcox48) said :
#4

david@david-laptop:~$ lspci | grep VGA
01:05.0 VGA compatible controller: ATI Technologies Inc Radeon Mobility U1
david@david-laptop:~$

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David Cox (davcox48) said :
#5

david@david-laptop:~$ lspci | grep VGA
01:05.0 VGA compatible controller: ATI Technologies Inc Radeon Mobility U1
david@david-laptop:~$ lspci grep VGA
Usage: lspci [<switches>]

Basic display modes:
-mm Produce machine-readable output (single -m for an obsolete format)
-t Show bus tree

Display options:
-v Be verbose (-vv for very verbose)
-k Show kernel drivers handling each device
-x Show hex-dump of the standard part of the config space
-xxx Show hex-dump of the whole config space (dangerous; root only)
-xxxx Show hex-dump of the 4096-byte extended config space (root only)
-b Bus-centric view (addresses and IRQ's as seen by the bus)
-D Always show domain numbers

Resolving of device ID's to names:
-n Show numeric ID's
-nn Show both textual and numeric ID's (names & numbers)
-q Query the PCI ID database for unknown ID's via DNS
-qq As above, but re-query locally cached entries
-Q Query the PCI ID database for all ID's via DNS

Selection of devices:
-s [[[[<domain>]:]<bus>]:][<slot>][.[<func>]] Show only devices in selected slots
-d [<vendor>]:[<device>] Show only devices with specified ID's

Other options:
-i <file> Use specified ID database instead of /usr/share/misc/pci.ids.gz
-p <file> Look up kernel modules in a given file instead of default modules.pcimap
-M Enable `bus mapping' mode (dangerous; root only)

PCI access options:
-A <method> Use the specified PCI access method (see `-A help' for a list)
-O <par>=<val> Set PCI access parameter (see `-O help' for a list)
-G Enable PCI access debugging
-H <mode> Use direct hardware access (<mode> = 1 or 2)
-F <file> Read PCI configuration dump from a given file
david@david-laptop:~$

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David Cox (davcox48) said :
#6

I hope I gave the correct info.

Thanks and happy holidays

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David Cox (davcox48) said :
#7

I have another issue that may be related to system freeze. When a terminal window is open ghost typing occurs. [[2~^ repeats until I hit return.

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David Cox (davcox48) said :
#8

Yet another issue is the computer will start taking screen shots automatically. In the past this leads to freeze. This time I kept clicking cancel and it stopped.

Hope this helps.

David

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David Cox (davcox48) said :
#9

Perhaps I should mention that I recently wiped win XP from my laptop and added Ubuntu Intrepid. I did so because I have been getting the blue screen of death... computer turns off and restarts. This had been going on for two years. I wonder if this sys freeze is the ubuntu way of reacting

Also yesterday with help I removed the keyboard and reseated the ribbon connector... this on the advice of someone online.

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Charles Profitt (cprofitt) said :
#10

I would suggest running a memory test from the liveCD.

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David Cox (davcox48) said :
#11

live cd? Would that be the CD I originally installed from? How do I do that exactly. I really am a beginner. Sorry.

I ran update manager recently. It installed software said to solve problems and security issues. The system seems a lot more stable now. No freeze in the last hour.

Thanks

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David Cox (davcox48) said :
#12

I'm still having freeze issues. I ran the memory test after booting off of the CD. Passed every test. I am beginning to think I have conflicting software issues. How do I go about monitoring the different programs that are running. Like those that run without my knowing it. And how can I stop processes that I think are gumming things up???

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David Cox (davcox48) said :
#13

I think I may have found the problem. On the advice of a linux user... Jeff... I disconnected my laptop's keyboard. I am using an external keyboard and mouse. I have been online in this mode for awhile with no freeze issues and no ghost typing in the terminal window. Jeff thinks I have a bad keyboard that is opening up to many programs. After awhile the CPU is overloaded with tasks to do and just freezes up.

I think I will wait awhile longer to report problem solved.

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David Cox (davcox48) said :
#14

Well...I think I can safely say the problem was the keyboard. Thanks for your help PrivateVoid.