Digital Wokan wrote: > > Jason, you haven't quite gotten out of the mentality brought about by > the use of certain closed source, market majority OS's have you. The > only Linux reboots people schedule are the ones that occur right after > compiling a new kernel. Hmm.. maybe. I used to have a hell of a time with Linux's sound support eventually crapping out, before the Persistant Buffers option was added to the sound driver. This is because the bottom 16MB of memory gradually got crowded out, fragmented, etc. Rebooting was a perfect way to solve this problem, and that box, which also worked as a jukebox, was set to reboot every night at 3AM if it was unused for the previous hour. I never did find a way to straighten out those bottom 16 megs without a reboot however - once sound support had died completely, it was gone for good. Up until that point, the sound driver would be able to occasionally find increasingly smaller chunks of memory in the bottom 16M. If I continued to use any other ISA device that requires DMA buffers, and did not have an option to make the buffers persistant, I would continue to run into this problem... which can apparently be solved only be recoding the relevant driver to use persistant buffers or rebooting every so often. I knew I could think of at least one real-world example of the need for this, it just took me a while. Bear in mind that upgrading wasnt an option either.. at the time I was running into this problem, there was absolutely no support for PCI sound in Linux. -- jkenner @ mindspring . com__ I Support Linux: _> _ _ |_ _ _ _| Working Together To <__(_||_)| )| `(_|(_)(_| To Build A Better Future. |