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Operating Systems Linux Ubuntu System loks up after upgrade from 14.04 to 16.04 Post 302979562 by gandolf989 on Tuesday 16th of August 2016 09:43:09 AM
Old 08-16-2016
Quote:
Originally Posted by MadeInGermany
2 GB RAM is certainly enough for stability (but maybe not for speed).
I rather suspect that one of the listed kernel modules is not part of the LTS distro, and should be updated for the new kernel.
I received a dual core PC with Windows 7 free from my work. It had 2GB of RAM and was terribly slow. I bought a 4GB video card and 4-4GB DDR3 DIMMS and it preforms OK. I may never use 16GB of RAM, but I know my PC will never have to swap. It never hurts to buy extra memory, since modern browsers can use gigabytes of RAM just to cache web pages. Whether you are running Windows or Linux, you will probably use a browser that will suck up as much memory as it can. ;-)

I should have mentioned that I am running Ubuntu 16.04 on an I3 HP laptop with 12GB of RAM. I needed to install the Chrome browser, Flash control and disable the embeded flash control that came with the OS. It seems to work well. I don't have any complaints other than streaming could have worked a little better from the base install.
 

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bcopy(9F)						   Kernel Functions for Drivers 						 bcopy(9F)

NAME
bcopy - copy data between address locations in the kernel SYNOPSIS
#include <sys/types.h> #include <sys/sunddi.h> void bcopy(const void *from, void *to, size_t bcount); INTERFACE LEVEL
Architecture independent level 1 (DDI/DKI). PARAMETERS
from Source address from which the copy is made. to Destination address to which copy is made. bcount The number of bytes moved. DESCRIPTION
The bcopy() function copies bcount bytes from one kernel address to another. If the input and output addresses overlap, the command exe- cutes, but the results may not be as expected. Note that bcopy() should never be used to move data in or out of a user buffer, because it has no provision for handling page faults. The user address space can be swapped out at any time, and bcopy() always assumes that there will be no paging faults. If bcopy() attempts to access the user buffer when it is swapped out, the system will panic. It is safe to use bcopy() to move data within kernel space, since kernel space is never swapped out. CONTEXT
The bcopy() function can be called from user, interrupt, or kernel context. EXAMPLES
Example 1 Copying data between address locations in the kernel: An I/O request is made for data stored in a RAM disk. If the I/O operation is a read request, the data is copied from the RAM disk to a buffer (line 8). If it is a write request, the data is copied from a buffer to the RAM disk (line 15). bcopy() is used since both the RAM disk and the buffer are part of the kernel address space. 1 #define RAMDNBLK 1000 /* blocks in the RAM disk */ 2 #define RAMDBSIZ 512 /* bytes per block */ 3 char ramdblks[RAMDNBLK][RAMDBSIZ]; /* blocks forming RAM /* disk ... 4 5 if (bp->b_flags & B_READ) /* if read request, copy data */ 6 /* from RAM disk data block */ 7 /* to system buffer */ 8 bcopy(&ramdblks[bp->b_blkno][0], bp->b_un.b_addr, 9 bp->b_bcount); 10 11 else /* else write request, */ 12 /* copy data from a */ 13 /* system buffer to RAM disk */ 14 /* data block */ 15 bcopy(bp->b_un.b_addr, &ramdblks[bp->b_blkno][0], 16 bp->b_bcount); SEE ALSO
copyin(9F), copyout(9F) Writing Device Drivers WARNINGS
The from and to addresses must be within the kernel space. No range checking is done. If an address outside of the kernel space is selected, the driver may corrupt the system in an unpredictable way. SunOS 5.11 16 Jan 2006 bcopy(9F)
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