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Joined 1 year ago
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Cake day: June 13th, 2023

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  • Possibly, but more likely the computer was just in need of some cleaning.

    My friend plays Helldivers 2 on his laptop with integrated graphics on medium and hits 30fps. Any CPU from the last 8 years should be enough.

    For the finals, yeah maybe you need something more powerful than that, but not by much. A 2070 is a fantastic GPU, it would be pretty weird to have a GPU from 2018 but a CPU from way earlier.





  • UPDATE: It crashed again today, and I was able to pull some logs and check the temperature at the time of the crash. (91 degrees which dropped to 71 degrees right before crashing?

    From system log

    <13>1 2024-03-13T18:30:44-04:00 OPNsense.my.home opnsense 44846 - [meta sequenceId="1192"] /usr/local/etc/rc.newwanipv6: No IP change detected (current: IPV6ADDRESSREDACTED, interface: wan)
    <13>1 2024-03-13T18:30:53-04:00 OPNsense.my.home opnsense 60522 - [meta sequenceId="1193"] /usr/local/etc/rc.newwanipv6: No IP change detected (current: IPV6ADDRESSREDACTED, interface: wan)
    <45>1 2024-03-13T22:12:44-04:00 OPNsense.my.home syslog-ng 10182 - [meta sequenceId="1"] syslog-ng starting up; version='4.6.0'
    <13>1 2024-03-13T22:12:45-04:00 OPNsense.my.home kernel - - [meta sequenceId="2"] ---<<BOOT>>---
    <13>1 2024-03-13T22:12:45-04:00 OPNsense.my.home kernel - - [meta sequenceId="138"] WARNING: / was not properly dismounted
    

    From dmesg

    arp: 192.168.1.61 moved from someMAC to anotherMAC on igc1
    arp: 192.168.1.61 moved from anotherMAC to someMAC on igc1
    WARNING: / was not properly dismounted
    WARNING: /: mount pending error: blocks 40 files 4
    

    I mean, I’m not saying that errors on the drive are the CAUSE of the problem, more likely a symptom, but it does look like it just straight up crashed, right?


  • UPDATE: It crashed again today, and I was able to pull some logs and check the temperature at the time of the crash. (91 degrees which dropped to 71 degrees right before crashing?

    From system log

    <13>1 2024-03-13T18:30:44-04:00 OPNsense.my.home opnsense 44846 - [meta sequenceId="1192"] /usr/local/etc/rc.newwanipv6: No IP change detected (current: IPV6ADDRESSREDACTED, interface: wan)
    <13>1 2024-03-13T18:30:53-04:00 OPNsense.my.home opnsense 60522 - [meta sequenceId="1193"] /usr/local/etc/rc.newwanipv6: No IP change detected (current: IPV6ADDRESSREDACTED, interface: wan)
    <45>1 2024-03-13T22:12:44-04:00 OPNsense.my.home syslog-ng 10182 - [meta sequenceId="1"] syslog-ng starting up; version='4.6.0'
    <13>1 2024-03-13T22:12:45-04:00 OPNsense.my.home kernel - - [meta sequenceId="2"] ---<<BOOT>>---
    <13>1 2024-03-13T22:12:45-04:00 OPNsense.my.home kernel - - [meta sequenceId="138"] WARNING: / was not properly dismounted
    

    From dmesg

    arp: 192.168.1.61 moved from someMAC to anotherMAC on igc1
    arp: 192.168.1.61 moved from anotherMAC to someMAC on igc1
    WARNING: / was not properly dismounted
    WARNING: /: mount pending error: blocks 40 files 4
    

    I mean, I’m not saying that errors on the drive are the CAUSE of the problem, more likely a symptom, but it does look like it just straight up crashed, right?


  • Dmesg doesn’t go back very far, does it? I only see the current boot and the one before that, which was a normal shutdown.

    I believe I was able to see the last logs before the system turned off last time, and the last messages were syncing discs and all buffers synced, which I would have expected to be part of a normal shutdown.

    If it happens again I’ll be sure to get the logs before the crash or shut down and save it to a file.


  • doctorzeromd@lemmy.worldOPtoOPNsense@lemmy.worldDetermine shutdown cause
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    8 months ago

    It’s plugged into a power strip that other devices are plugged into, I did turn on “power on on ac restore” so if it is power related it should come back and I’ll see the downtime in uptimekuma.

    The system logs go straight from No IP Change detected to the next boot, so a crash or failure seem likely. If something told the computer to shut down, I should see that in the logs, right?

    It’s a passively cooled computer, is there any way that I can determine whether a high temp forced the computer down?