When I inspect the syslog if find lots of soft lockups for each CPU with increasing seconds. On one VM all 4 CPU's are locked and on the other only CPU 1-2-3 is locked but the result is the same - no response to keyboard and mouse.
@cb831 Since you are experiencing lockups while running VMware Workstation, you should post this in the VMware Workstation forums. Workstation is using a different hypervisor implementation (either VMware's own hypervisor or Hyper-V) than Fusion 12 (macOS hypervisor frameworks).
So you think that the vmware ran CPL0 before when it worked...
I have backups - so I can try to find a vmware.log from a month ago.
Did you notice all the timeouts and failures around VMTools in the log - I guess those could explain the kernel waits in the guest that produces the soft lockups in syslog.
Generally, yes. If you are an investor who buys shares in the open market on the day of the IPO, then you can buy and sell at will. However, if you participated in the IPO itself and received shares at the IPO price before the first day of trading, you would be subject to the lock-up period for those shares."}},"@type": "Question","name": "Why Do Stocks Fall in Price When the Lock-Up Period Expires?","acceptedAnswer": "@type": "Answer","text": "When the lock-up period expires, company insiders and early investors can sell their shares in the open market for the first time. Many of these sellers would be realizing their first substantial gains as cash from their investment. Because of the flood of shares hitting the market, the supply can exceed the demand when the lock-up period expires, forcing down the price. Additionally, people now expect this to happen and will pre-empt this selling with their own.","@type": "Question","name": "Do SPACs Have Lock-Up Periods?","acceptedAnswer": "@type": "Answer","text": "SPACs (special purpose acquisition companies) are a type of investment company that look for takeover targets using funds raised during an IPO, although shareholders often do not know what that target might be initially. SPACs have lockup periods of 6 to 12 months or longer.
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SPACs (special purpose acquisition companies) are a type of investment company that look for takeover targets using funds raised during an IPO, although shareholders often do not know what that target might be initially. SPACs have lockup periods of 6 to 12 months or longer.
Why so many versions of our lockup? The simple answer is to ensure maximum reproduction of the shield based on the space available, budget, colors, materials, and vendor capabilities. The vertical lockup is preferred in most printed instances; the horizontal stacked version is useful for electronic channels and outdoor environments--where the scale is very small and very large. Here's an overview of what's available, their names, and uses.
I've been facing this issue when trying to install Elementary OS Freya from a USB stick and the fix above didn't work. I simply couldn't get in, either I'm stuck at the Elementary logo with a cursor, black screen with a cursor which changes to GPU lockup message or sometimes both. My graphics card is an NVidia Go 7300
The ETR and the ETRs are not very different. The ETRs does NOT have mirror lockup, which is only found on the ETRsi model. I have both the ETRs and the ETRsi. To me, mirror lockup is not so much better that I would take one over the other. I have a 20 x 24 on my wall taken with 400 speed film using the ETRs (which does not have mirror lockup) and people are amazed at the detail.
The core dump is expected: QEMU goes into lockup, but we don't emulate lockup correctly (strictly speaking QEMU should just sit there doing nothing like the real hardware does), so we print a register dump and abort(). As I said in my previous comment, your problem is almost certainly that your binary doesn't have a vector table.
Long story behind this one. We were having a terrible time with OHB's causing RHEL VMs to lockup. At that time we had the symcquiesce utility on all VMs. The Linux admin investigating this decided that the utility was the source of the problem so decided to remove the utility from the environment. Backup success from the console view of the world is 99% but users still frequently complain of VMs locking up as a result of the snapshot process apparently, the snapshot is attempted, then vmware tools dies and periodically the VMs have to be reset to get back to normal. The other thing is they removed the iso from the datastore that was used to install years back and on our master/media server, the only thing under \NetBackup\bin\goodies\vmware-quiesce is the SYMCquiesce.1.0.0-001.iso, but my read of the 7.5.0.7 release notes says this on P 45:
Ok more on this. We've done some analysis. With the Symcquiesce utility installed on these RHEL5.4 VMs, the VM running vmwaretools v8 does NOT lockup - ever, but the VMs on version 9 lockup immediately upon creating the snapshot. We have debugging enabled inthe vmtools but they tell me there is nothing in the debug log (empty) so maybe they don't quite have it right. Today, to eliminate doubt and for currancy reasons, I applied the 7.5.0.7 update to be sure, same result on the locking up the VMs. Seems to me this is not a Symantec issue but more likely VMware or RedHat. We don't seem to have a direct match for the case Stuart references, but it does appear very similar. I'm going to get a 3 way going between all you vendors so we can hoepfully get to the bottom of it, the customers are getting really cranky with the lockups and I don't think downreving the vmtools is a long term solution, obviously.
We are not running 7.6 yet so I cannot say. The issue could affect RHEL VMs up to 6.3 as I recall, but in our case, only the 5.4 clients are suffering. The workaround for us since patching them (upgrading to 6.x is not an option) and we did not want to be forced into running ancient vmtools "forever", we simply put these affected hosts into a policy where there is no quiescing. Yes, not ideal, but the app owners signed off on it since it's a lab environment. We have tested restores and such with no issues detected so we think the risk is relatively low for the handful of clients affected by this. All newer builds with the newer tools works fine, no lockups at all these days (99.99% successful backups day after day).
You need to lock up enough CRO for your metal Crypto.com Visa Card. When the lockup is done, we will review your application, and as soon as your card status is changed to "Shipped", the card will be on its way to you.
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