Spyke

crash in Ubuntu GNU/Linux

this is the first time in many years of my GNU/Linux journey that I saw a BSOD. on my office machine BTW. personal machine has never crashed even once.
the crash was due to 100% RAM and swap usage.

image description:
a mobile-clicked photo of a laptop screen. the background is full black with a sad computer image in the middle. the text below it reads: "Oh no! something has gone wrong. A problem has occurred and the system can't recover. Please log out and try again."
just below it is a small button with the text "log out"

View original on discuss.tchncs.de
Kusimulkkureply
lemm.ee

Cloud is the future. Mount Google Drive as your swap

24

What if they have more than one pc? Are they supposed to buy a harddrive for each?

Get yourself a NAS and use that for swap, much easier to share between devices!

6
bartolomeoreply
suppo.fi

How do you get it to actually swap? I tried changing swapiness but it still hardly touches swap but maxes out ram and freezes.

1

To be frank, I don't actually know. I've had one or two times where my ram was maxed out because I used too many VMs but I barely remember

1
lemmy.ml

100% RAM is a huge pain on Linux. I have a widget in my taskbar that always shows my RAM usage so I can tell if I'm about to get doinked

30
gruereply
lemmy.world

Up until yesterday I would've said "Firefox" (because I hoard tabs), but it turns the real answer was "Firefox running as a Snap."

(A failed update screwed up my Snap installation, which finally gave me the kick I needed to quit procrastinating and excise it from my system once and for all. I'm running Firefox installed via apt package from Mozilla's PPA, and now -- with the same number of tabs open -- my system is hovering around 8 GB memory usage, when before it was constantly bouncing off the 32 GB redline.)

13
lemmy.world

Firefox somewhat regularly crashes or freezes up my laptop (16Gb) due to memory usage and I'm running the default Arch package. I ended up installing a memory watchdog that kills processes when they start using too much. Although I do hoard tabs.

2
Holzkohlenreply
feddit.de

I mean there is a kernel OOM killer and a systemd service that acts well before that. Do you not use systemd?

1
lemmy.ml

Carelessly running too many programs and not having much RAM.

When I get my Framework 16, I'll either get 64 or 128GBs of RAM. It's so cheap nowadays, the only thing stopping me from getting more is simply the increased time to go to sleep and wake up.

5
lemmy.world

Yeah i only get near 100% when I'm doing a lot of virtualization or running nyx for a long time since there's a memory leak in there.

5

Not unstable nor unreliable, just a bit buggy. Every so often you gotta do a quick qq to exit and wait up to 5 minutes for it to let go of the ram. On occasion I've had to terminate the process as it was doing something wacky.

2

I have 16 GB and it feels like a lot. I run virtual machines and I still have leftovers

2

You know your in for a good time when notepad give a warning before hand, ive run into this before filling my 32gb of ram.

1
mander.xyz

Technically you can create a fixed size pagefile in your disk and mount it as swap workout repartitioning. But Linux doesn't use swap much regardless of method.

1

It only uses swap under memory pressure. You can configure your swappyness if you want it to be more aggressive

1

There are automated memory killers that should avoid this. I'm using nohang, but systemd also has some module for this.

1
programming.dev

The cool part is, the kernel and most of the user space is still running fine, so there's no restart required (although I would anyway), it's just gnome is having issues.

I've had dodgy hardware cause a kernel panic, which is much more equivalent to a Windows BSOD.

28
lemmesayreply
discuss.tchncs.de

I think I made it work too much. i'm running 23.10(non-LTS), hadn't shut it down for weeks, and was hoarding close to 200 tabs. furthermore, I had 3-4 electron-based applications open.

5
lemmy.ca

That's not a problem. Especially because modern tabs hibernate. Linux can go forever without restarting, to the point where there are multiple services cropping up that let you upgrade your kernel while it's running, so you never have to reboot (mostly, in some edge cases it's still recommended to reboot).

6
lemmy.world

Oooh, this blokes found a beauty! I haven't seen one of those since I used an Eee PC with Debian as my daily driver. It has a whopping 1, I repeat, ONE GIGAbyte of RAM.

9
lemmy.world

My very first experience with installing Ubuntu was a complete failure because I just got constant kernal panics. This was 2007ish trying to install Ubuntu on a bondi blue iMac using CD I had ordered from Canonical.

2
evidencesreply
lemmy.world

I'm still on windows on my dekstop, I have a handful of boxes running various forms of Linux but I'm mainly just here for the memes.

1
lemmesayreply
discuss.tchncs.de

should I be honoured or concerned that i'm being compared to AI? I wanted it to be descriptive.
also, facebook has been generating alt text using AI for years now. you can see the same on unsplash.

5

I literary had this problem today!!! What I did to fix, and I'm not sure which one of these it is, but I ran all of these and I got it to work again

sudo apt install --fix-broken

sudo apt-get update && sudo apt-get upgrade

sudo apt install --reinstall gnome

sudo apt install --reinstall xorg

sudo apt install --fix-missing

sudo apt autoremove

2