Randomly on my laptop screen this appears and debian just freezes. Sometimes these vertical lines don’t appear and system freezes anyway. Its just random. How do i identify if this is hardware or software issue? and then how to identify exact piece of hardware or software causing this problem.

  • just_another_person@lemmy.world
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    5 months ago

    RAM or Video card issue. Are you SURE the entire machine actually locks up, or just the display? Try ssh’ing into the machine when this happens to see if it’s actually staying alive, though the display stops working.

    • awesome_guy@lemmy.mlOP
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      5 months ago

      yeah, entire machine locks up. Yeah have tried ssh’ing from mobile and it was stuck one time when i did that during a freeze. have replugged RAM let’s see if system freezes again,

  • titter@lemmy.world
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    5 months ago

    Idk how useful this is but that looks like when i had bad RAM, or like when RAM becomes unseated. You could try reseating your RAM, YMMV.

  • djsaskdja@reddthat.com
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    5 months ago

    It’s not happening when you try to initiate sleep mode, is it? I have a computer that only ever does something like this when I try to use sleep. I’ve basically just stopped using that feature because nothing I tried ever fixed it. Works completely fine otherwise.

  • FNAF Desktop Fan@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    5 months ago

    That kind of looks like how a machine would look if the RAM is loose in the socket or otherwise have a bad contact. And since you mention that it’s random and sometimes there are no vertical lines, that’d be my guess rather than anything to do with graphical software. Is the RAM on your machine soldered on or is it detachable? If it’s the latter, I recommend taking the RAM out and reseating it to see if things improve (try this a couple of times, just to be sure the RAM is properly seated). If the RAM is soldered on then it might have something to do with out of memory. Does the system slow down a couple of seconds before freezing entirely? If it does then it’s likely it’s a OOM thing.

    Oh, and for good measure, can you get to the tty (ctrl + alt + f2) when the system freezes? If you can then it’s probably a graphical thing and you can try restarting those processes. If the system is in a complete freeze then I’d say that’s another point for the OOM hypothesis.

    • awesome_guy@lemmy.mlOP
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      5 months ago

      yeah, i think you might be right about RAM. Because one day i was holding my latop in my one hand and i saw this screen flickering thing. that was the first time this issue happened. And yeah i can not login to tty when the freeze happens this mean system is completely blocked and is not a graphical problem. I dont think its OOM issue as i have enough RAM and no system doesnt slow down a couple of seconds before freezing entirely. The freeze is random and instant and it happens sometimes when i slide laptop so i think its due to RAM loose connection. Not sure if the RAM is soldered one or is detachable. I will try to replug it and see if it fixes the problem. btw the machine in question is macbook pro 2012 and thanks for replying kind stranger!

      Edit: the ram is detachable.

  • h0bbl3s@lemmy.world
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    5 months ago

    I have a similar issue specific to my Intel graphics, debian 12, and kde. It’s fixed in the newer kernel in debian Trixie. In my case I was able to set up a keybind to ctrl-alt-backspace which kills the graphics server. I have to catch it quick or it’ll lock up completely, but it’s something to try. I’m on 15 days uptime now I’ve probably had to do that about 5 times.

      • h0bbl3s@lemmy.world
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        5 months ago

        Np. Trying to find the exact page but I just checked the last logs in journalctl after each crash to determine that’s what it was. If you search Wayland + kwin + Intel GPU crash you get lots of hits. It can be fixed but now that I know it’s very specific to my setup and already fixed in future versions I’m not so worried.

      • zolax@programming.dev
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        5 months ago

        that’s good then! i had this same issue (randomly freezing after turning it om for some time) though new RAM ended up fixing it

        • awesome_guy@lemmy.mlOP
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          5 months ago

          Hmmm. I have also installed linux mint xfce from scratch. So far so good. It stuck only one time since this install. And its been 5 days or so i guess.

    • awesome_guy@lemmy.mlOP
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      5 months ago

      | What GPU and driver are you using? Looks gpu driver related to me.

      	Subsystem: Apple Inc. 3rd Gen Core processor Graphics Controller [106b:00fa]
      	Flags: bus master, fast devsel, latency 0, IRQ 46
      	Memory at a0000000 (64-bit, non-prefetchable) [size=4M]
      	Memory at 90000000 (64-bit, prefetchable) [size=256M]
      	I/O ports at 2000 [size=64]
      	Expansion ROM at 000c0000 [virtual] [disabled] [size=128K]
      	Capabilities: <access denied>
      	Kernel driver in use: i915
      	Kernel modules: i915
      
      00:14.0 USB controller [0c03]: Intel Corporation 7 Series/C210 Series Chipset Family USB xHCI Host Controller [8086:1e31] (rev 04) (prog-if 30 [XHCI])
      	Subsystem: Intel Corporation 7 Series/C210 Series Chipset Family USB xHCI Host Controller [8086:7270]```
      
    • awesome_guy@lemmy.mlOP
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      5 months ago

      What GPU and driver are you using? Looks gpu driver related to me.

      for context, i have been using debian 12 for last 6 months perfectly fine. Its just from last week my laptop is randomly freezing and then I have to hard reset it everytime this happens, (pressing power off button for few seconds to force shutdown).