(In reply to comment #15)
> Dirk and Roland, are you using the rt2500 wireless driver (or similar)? If so,
> does John's command stop the kernel panics?
>
> Also take a look at your /var/log/messages, as what appears on screen is
> probably the end result of the problem, not necessarily the start.
>
> That'd be the easiest way to see if you're affected by the same bug as me,
> whether it's more complicated, or even multiple different bugs.
>
> Gareth
Using rt2500pci rt2x00lib
John's command seems to stop the kernel panic. System is up one hour now. Without
iw dev wlan0 set power_save off
panic occurred after a couple of minutes.
Regarding /var/log/messages not sure which part might be of any interest now.
(In reply to comment #15)
> Dirk and Roland, are you using the rt2500 wireless driver (or similar)? If so,
> does John's command stop the kernel panics?
>
> Also take a look at your /var/log/messages, as what appears on screen is
> probably the end result of the problem, not necessarily the start.
>
> That'd be the easiest way to see if you're affected by the same bug as me,
> whether it's more complicated, or even multiple different bugs.
>
> Gareth
Using rt2500pci rt2x00lib
John's command seems to stop the kernel panic. System is up one hour now. Without
iw dev wlan0 set power_save off
panic occurred after a couple of minutes.
Regarding /var/log/messages not sure which part might be of any interest now.