
So IMO this would only be useful for private use.
i don`t think so - at least i wouldn`t say it`s only usefule for private use if you mean "home use"
- think of developing countries where people cannot afford replacing their ram because of just "one bit out of millions" is bad
- think of companies with large test/development environments which are not mission critical. we have many boxes out of service contract at work - and we still use them until they die or getting too old
- think of a server which constantly crashes during a recover you try with grml - due to bad ram. should you really buy new ram for that machine if it gets replaced, anyway - and you just need it being running stable for the recovery process ? maybe this is just a theoretical scenario, but the discussion about the pro`s and con`s of badram patch is very controversial.
anyway - i heard there will be an request for inclusion into mainline soon.
roland
-----Ursprüngliche Nachricht----- Von: Andreas Gredler jimmy@grml.org Gesendet: 30.10.06 13:55:46 An: grml@mur.at Betreff: Re: [Grml] BadRam/BadMem Kernelpatch
On Sun, Oct 29, 2006 at 03:02:15PM +0100, devzero@web.de wrote:
Description:
BadRAM: Linux kernel support for broken RAM modules Summary: This page proposes an approach to support RAMs with defective addresses, This may open interesting business perspectives, where those RAMs can be sold under a white label for less money rather than discarded of without any profit.
If you talk about business... Broken RAM always gets replaced by new modules, since this is mission critical and covered by warranty and/or service contracts. Additionally, "real" servers mirror RAM and have spare RAMs installed. So IMO this would only be useful for private use.
greets Jimmy
-- Andreas "Jimmy" Gredler ,'"`. http://www.jimmy.co.at/ | jimmy@g-tec.co.at ( grml.org -» Linux Live-CD for texttool-users and sysadmins `._, http://www.grml.org/ | jimmy@grml.org _______________________________________________ Grml mailing list - Grml@mur.at http://lists.mur.at/mailman/listinfo/grml join #grml on irc.freenode.org grml-devel-blog: http://grml.supersized.org/
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