this post was submitted on 15 Sep 2023
16 points (100.0% liked)

techsupport

2470 readers
41 users here now

The Lemmy community will help you with your tech problems and questions about anything here. Do not be shy, we will try to help you.

If something works or if you find a solution to your problem let us know it will be greatly apreciated.

Rules: instance rules + stay on topic

Partnered communities:

You Should Know

Reddit

Software gore

Recommendations

founded 1 year ago
MODERATORS
 

I have assembled my desktop PC about 2 years ago. It's fairly beefy (AMD Ryzen 9 3950X 16-Core Processor, 128Go RAM, nVidia RTX 3080 Ti). It's running debian stable.

Once in a while (not that often, but like every 2 weeks or so), seemingly at random times, not especially under heavy loads, the system crash and freeze, irresponsive to even the linux sysrq magic keys. I never manage to find what was the cause. One interesting fact is that when it happens, for some reason it seems to "freeze my network" too, ie, other (ethernet) devices on my local network have no connectivity anymore. They're all connected to the same router, but not through this crashing PC. Connectivity comes back as soon as I force shutdown the crashing PC.

What can cause this and how could I fix these freezes?

you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 year ago (1 children)

You won't have much luck with doing anything to the driver part of it, but you could try a custom kernel. There's two advantages to that, one is it would be more recent than whatever kernel that Debian is using, and the second is the optimized networking stack, which speeds up processing of packets and improves the congestion handling algorithm. I'd recommend the Xanmod kernel for this: https://xanmod.org/

Alternatively, if we suspect your network is the culprit then the solution could be as simple a buying a new card and disabling the builtin one.

[–] nicocool84 1 points 1 year ago

I like my debian vanilla but thanks for the suggestion. The other network card would be interesting to try out. I don't really suspect the network card, since I have no idea whether the network block is a consequence or a cause here.