Difference between revisions of "Ooops"
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(Created page with " :* [http://web.archive.org/20080120030401/kerneltrap.org/Linux/Collecting_Kernel_Oops_Data Collecting Kernel Oops Data] :* [http://web.archive.org/20080111150100/kerneltrap.o...") |
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:* [http://web.archive.org/20080104022446/kerneltrap.org/Linux/Dusting_Off_the_0.01_Kernel Dusting Off The 0.01 Kernel] | :* [http://web.archive.org/20080104022446/kerneltrap.org/Linux/Dusting_Off_the_0.01_Kernel Dusting Off The 0.01 Kernel] | ||
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+ | == See also == | ||
+ | * {{Linux Kernel}} | ||
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+ | [[Category:Linux Kernel]] |
Revision as of 16:14, 21 September 2022
... understanding and investigating logged pops events is a very useful learning exercise for any student of the Linux kernel.
Some notes about compiling the ancient (practically pre-historic) 0.01 kernel sources on a modern system with a modern gcc and toolchain:
See also
- Linux Kernel: namespaces, Cgroups, OOM, proc, Linux Kernel changelog,
sysctl, userfaultfd
, Grub, ENOSPC, ENOMEM, DKMS, syscall, Transparent huge pages, smatch, sysfs, vm.swappiness, CFS, Runlevel, Jens Axboe, Consistent Network Device Naming, Initial ramdisk (initrd),modprobe
, MTD, Linux Kernel vulnerabilities,/sys/kernel/
, KernelCare,unix://
, Data Plane Development Kit (DPDK)
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