F5F Stay Refreshed Hardware Desktop You're experiencing unpredictable crashes on your low-mid range PC, but it's hard to pinpoint the issue.

You're experiencing unpredictable crashes on your low-mid range PC, but it's hard to pinpoint the issue.

You're experiencing unpredictable crashes on your low-mid range PC, but it's hard to pinpoint the issue.

S
Sussu
Senior Member
708
01-11-2025, 08:03 PM
#1
Over the past week, I've experienced recurring, though unpredictable, shutdowns on my computer. Here are the details:

My system runs Debian GNU/Linux trixie/sid x86_64, with a price tag of $$. Host details: MS-7C95 1.0, kernel version 6.9.10-amd64. Uptime is about 50 minutes. Packages installed total 3667 (dpkg). Shell version is bash 5.2.21; resolution is 1920x1080.

I'm using Plasma 5.27.11, and the environment supports WM and GTK2/3 themes. I'm on a Konsole terminal. CPU specs: AMD Ryzen 5 5600X (12 cores) at 3.700GHz.

I tried connecting a breadboard and Arduino to lower the GPU voltage from 12V to +5V, allowing me to connect directly to my CPU via serial for logging. I captured some crash images and recovered from a few incidents. Most crashes occurred during Minecraft gameplay with shaders, but I also faced issues with Firefox (a tab crash, page fault killing a Minecraft instance), and CPU errors linked to cache invalidation at the kernel level.

Initially, I suspected the GPU was faulty, but the pattern of errors suggests RAM might be the culprit. When GPU crashes happen, I can use systemctl isolate rescue.target to restart without a full reboot, letting me resume from the last safe state. I ran Memtest86+ and it passed, though it might need more time. After replacing RAM and GPU, the gold pins looked undamaged.

Any suggestions on what might be causing these problems? I suspect RAM could be the root cause, given the shared memory issues.
S
Sussu
01-11-2025, 08:03 PM #1

Over the past week, I've experienced recurring, though unpredictable, shutdowns on my computer. Here are the details:

My system runs Debian GNU/Linux trixie/sid x86_64, with a price tag of $$. Host details: MS-7C95 1.0, kernel version 6.9.10-amd64. Uptime is about 50 minutes. Packages installed total 3667 (dpkg). Shell version is bash 5.2.21; resolution is 1920x1080.

I'm using Plasma 5.27.11, and the environment supports WM and GTK2/3 themes. I'm on a Konsole terminal. CPU specs: AMD Ryzen 5 5600X (12 cores) at 3.700GHz.

I tried connecting a breadboard and Arduino to lower the GPU voltage from 12V to +5V, allowing me to connect directly to my CPU via serial for logging. I captured some crash images and recovered from a few incidents. Most crashes occurred during Minecraft gameplay with shaders, but I also faced issues with Firefox (a tab crash, page fault killing a Minecraft instance), and CPU errors linked to cache invalidation at the kernel level.

Initially, I suspected the GPU was faulty, but the pattern of errors suggests RAM might be the culprit. When GPU crashes happen, I can use systemctl isolate rescue.target to restart without a full reboot, letting me resume from the last safe state. I ran Memtest86+ and it passed, though it might need more time. After replacing RAM and GPU, the gold pins looked undamaged.

Any suggestions on what might be causing these problems? I suspect RAM could be the root cause, given the shared memory issues.

T
tacoriffic321
Member
144
01-11-2025, 08:03 PM
#2
Start from a portable OS like Ubuntu to check for crashes, which would indicate hardware issues.
T
tacoriffic321
01-11-2025, 08:03 PM #2

Start from a portable OS like Ubuntu to check for crashes, which would indicate hardware issues.

L
LOTR
Member
50
01-11-2025, 08:03 PM
#3
I’d prefer to avoid these issues, as the problems seem rooted in hardware rather than software. The cache invalidation and Linux kernel have already flagged similar issues, so running a live system wouldn’t help. I’m checking how much I pushed the GPU voltage down, since overheating can spike to 90°C, and wondering if my aggressive undervolting might have led to power instability.
L
LOTR
01-11-2025, 08:03 PM #3

I’d prefer to avoid these issues, as the problems seem rooted in hardware rather than software. The cache invalidation and Linux kernel have already flagged similar issues, so running a live system wouldn’t help. I’m checking how much I pushed the GPU voltage down, since overheating can spike to 90°C, and wondering if my aggressive undervolting might have led to power instability.

E
Erykane67
Member
122
01-11-2025, 08:03 PM
#4
I adjusted the GPU voltage down from -150mV to -100mV and haven't experienced another crash recently. I'll check again tomorrow if any issues arise.
E
Erykane67
01-11-2025, 08:03 PM #4

I adjusted the GPU voltage down from -150mV to -100mV and haven't experienced another crash recently. I'll check again tomorrow if any issues arise.