this post was submitted on 09 Feb 2024
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    this is the first time in many years of my GNU/Linux journey that I saw a BSOD. on my office machine BTW. personal machine has never crashed even once.
    the crash was due to 100% RAM and swap usage.

    image description:
    a mobile-clicked photo of a laptop screen. the background is full black with a sad computer image in the middle. the text below it reads: "Oh no! something has gone wrong. A problem has occurred and the system can't recover. Please log out and try again."
    just below it is a small button with the text "log out"

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    [–] SteveTech@programming.dev 28 points 1 year ago (1 children)

    The cool part is, the kernel and most of the user space is still running fine, so there's no restart required (although I would anyway), it's just gnome is having issues.

    I've had dodgy hardware cause a kernel panic, which is much more equivalent to a Windows BSOD.

    [–] lemmesay@discuss.tchncs.de 5 points 1 year ago (1 children)

    I think I made it work too much. i'm running 23.10(non-LTS), hadn't shut it down for weeks, and was hoarding close to 200 tabs. furthermore, I had 3-4 electron-based applications open.

    [–] caseyweederman@lemmy.ca 6 points 1 year ago (1 children)

    That's not a problem. Especially because modern tabs hibernate. Linux can go forever without restarting, to the point where there are multiple services cropping up that let you upgrade your kernel while it's running, so you never have to reboot (mostly, in some edge cases it's still recommended to reboot).

    [–] caseyweederman@lemmy.ca 3 points 1 year ago

    Oh yeah but like... Swap. And stuff.