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Operating Systems Solaris Error is “sticky” on board4 J3400. Post 302230006 by rhfrommn on Thursday 28th of August 2008 11:30:06 AM
Old 08-28-2008
I agree with the 2 above responses. "Sticky" means a memory error that the kernel can detect and fix but keeps repeating. That is why prtdiag looks ok - the memory stick hasn't totally failed yet so if the kernel keeps correcting the errors the hardware diags think it is ok.

If it keeps coming up so regularly like this eventually it will become uncorrectable and crash your box. May be in 5 minutes, may be in 5 years. But since you don't know when it will crash the prudent thing is to replace the failing memory ASAP, before it gets any more serious.
 

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CRASH(8)						    BSD System Manager's Manual 						  CRASH(8)

NAME
crash -- examine and debug system images SYNOPSIS
crash [-M core] [-N kernel] DESCRIPTION
The crash command is used to examine and debug system images. If run without any arguments, crash operates on the running system. The options are as follows: -M core Operate on the specified crash dump instead of the default /dev/mem. Crash dumps should be from the same version of the system and same machine architecture as the running version of crash, and must be uncompressed. -N kernel Extract the name list from the specified kernel instead of the default /dev/ksyms. The command syntax used by crash is the same as the in-kernel debugger. See the ddb(4) manual page for more information. Operations and facilities that require a running system, such as breakpoints, are not supported by crash. crash does not provide pagination. However, by using the pipe symbol, output may be sent to commands available from the shell. For example: crash> ps | more crash> ps | grep ioflush SEE ALSO
ps(1), vmstat(1), ddb(4), pstat(8) HISTORY
The crash command appeared in NetBSD 6.0. BSD
March 7, 2009 BSD
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