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Operating Systems Solaris Solaris 11 Express - freezes on startup! Post 302566680 by Smokin Whale on Thursday 20th of October 2011 09:02:15 PM
Old 10-20-2011
Solaris 11 Express - freezes on startup!

I seem to be having a very irritating problem with my Solaris 11 Express fileserver which I built for my small home business. The basic problem is that the system will hang or freeze about 20 seconds into booting up. Grub comes up fine, and I can select between pre-napp-it and current build. It always seems to freeze at the same position. Here are my system specifications:

Intel Xeon E3 1220 3.1ghz Quad-core CPU
Intel S1200BTL Motherboard (has caused me all sorts of dramas)
16GB (4x4GB) ECC Transcend DDR3 1333mhz RAM
2x Western Digital 320GB notebook drives as boot in zpool RAID
6x Samsung 2TB disks in Raidz2
5x Samsung 2TB disks in Raidz1
Corsair VX450w PSU
Antec 1200 case with lots of cooling
Napp-it web-gui 0.500s

Now I have been experiencing all sorts of incompatibility issues with the Intel Motherboard. Firstly, it wouldn't accept my Hynix ECC ram and I had to go out and buy some transcend which worked okay. It also consistantly rebooted itself if I was running certain applications for some unknown reasons. Eg. Older versions of Memtest and Seatools will cause the system to hang or reboot. Installing VirtualBox within Solaris also caused a reboot. Occationally it would reboot randomly.

I disabled some features in the BIOS, and some of these issues went away. However yesterday, shortly after I got VirtualBox to successfully install, it was copying some files to the server which failed halfway through. It dropped off the network, and when I went to look at the monitor connected to the server, it said it was "out of range". I rebooted the server, and it has frozen on startup ever since. I tried both disks in my zpool mirror, with no success.

I don't have any ZFS snapshots, because I only just finished building the damn thing and I hadn't got around to learning how to backup the zpool. I also don't have a clue how I would restore a snapshot. Is there any disk check or file integrity check I can run? The disks themselves are tested to be fine, as is the memory. Could re-installing Grub help this issue? Any assistance would be greatly appreciated!

Sorry for the long post Smilie

Last edited by Smokin Whale; 10-20-2011 at 10:33 PM..
 

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REBOOT(2)						      BSD System Calls Manual							 REBOOT(2)

NAME
reboot -- reboot system or halt processor LIBRARY
Standard C Library (libc, -lc) SYNOPSIS
#include <unistd.h> #include <sys/reboot.h> int reboot(int howto); DESCRIPTION
The reboot() system call reboots the system. Only the super-user may reboot a machine on demand. However, a reboot is invoked automatically in the event of unrecoverable system failures. The howto argument is a mask of options; the system call interface allows the following options, defined in the include file <sys/reboot.h>, to be passed to the new kernel or the new bootstrap and init programs. RB_AUTOBOOT The default, causing the system to reboot in its usual fashion. RB_ASKNAME Interpreted by the bootstrap program itself, causing it to prompt on the console as to what file should be booted. Normally, the system is booted from the file ``xx(0,0)kernel'', where xx is the default disk name, without prompting for the file name. RB_DFLTROOT Use the compiled in root device. Normally, the system uses the device from which it was booted as the root device if possible. (The default behavior is dependent on the ability of the bootstrap program to determine the drive from which it was loaded, which is not possible on all systems.) RB_DUMP Dump kernel memory before rebooting; see savecore(8) for more information. RB_HALT the processor is simply halted; no reboot takes place. This option should be used with caution. RB_POWEROFF After halting, the shutdown code will do what it can to turn off the power. This requires hardware support. RB_INITNAME An option allowing the specification of an init program (see init(8)) other than /sbin/init to be run when the system reboots. This switch is not currently available. RB_KDB Load the symbol table and enable a built-in debugger in the system. This option will have no useful function if the kernel is not configured for debugging. Several other options have different meaning if combined with this option, although their use may not be possible via the reboot() system call. See ddb(4) for more information. RB_NOSYNC Normally, the disks are sync'd (see sync(8)) before the processor is halted or rebooted. This option may be useful if file system changes have been made manually or if the processor is on fire. RB_RDONLY Initially mount the root file system read-only. This is currently the default, and this option has been deprecated. RB_SINGLE Normally, the reboot procedure involves an automatic disk consistency check and then multi-user operations. RB_SINGLE prevents this, booting the system with a single-user shell on the console. RB_SINGLE is actually interpreted by the init(8) program in the newly booted system. When no options are given (i.e., RB_AUTOBOOT is used), the system is rebooted from file ``kernel'' in the root file system of unit 0 of a disk chosen in a processor specific way. An automatic consistency check of the disks is normally performed (see fsck(8)). RETURN VALUES
If successful, this call never returns. Otherwise, a -1 is returned and an error is returned in the global variable errno. ERRORS
[EPERM] The caller is not the super-user. SEE ALSO
crash(8), halt(8), init(8), reboot(8), savecore(8) HISTORY
The reboot() system call appeared in 4.0BSD. BUGS
The HP300 implementation supports neither RB_DFLTROOT nor RB_KDB. BSD
June 4, 1993 BSD
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