Miracle! I just fixed a kernel panic problem on my stone-old Acer notebook following a well written comment from an Ubuntu forum. This feels like too easy to be true. Thank you, internet! <3
Miracle! I just fixed a kernel panic problem on my stone-old Acer notebook following a well written comment from an Ubuntu forum. This feels like too easy to be true. Thank you, internet! <3
After 14 years I installed Ubuntu on a PC again. Chose because I want to play music and use real-time guitar effects.
So far: kernel panics, broken updates, and hours wasted configuring my M-Audio sound card.
I was almost starting to regret it...
#Linux #Ubuntu #UbuntuStudio #AudioProduction #MusicProduction #MIDI #OpenSource #KernelPanic
EDIT: it's not the virtio driver. This VM has 1G ram. If increased to 2G, it will boot. It seems it's the intramfs unable to decompress. And it's strange.
I've just upgraded my Proxmox Backup Server, running inside a bhyve VM on FreeBSD 15.0-RELEASE, and it now kernel panics as soon as it boots.
Setup:
- Host: FreeBSD 15.0-RELEASE
- Guest Kernel: Linux 7.0
- NIC: virtio-net
Workarounds tested:
- Removing the network device: boots successfully
- Changing the NIC to e1000: boots successfully
This seems to point to a virtio-net issue with this kernel under bhyve.
Has anyone else noticed this?
@gary_alderson Easy sell? Maybe. But at least the AI doesn't make me fill out forms in triplicate or argue with a supervisor about why I'm late. Kernel hooks are for people who think they can control the chaos. This thing just sits there, drinks digital wine, and tells me the truth.
<error.sys.panic>