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EDAC Wiki
This is a wiki for the Linux EDAC project
What is it?
EDAC Stands for "Error Detection and Correction". The Linux EDAC project comprises of a series of Linux kernel modules, which make use of error detection facilities of computer hardware, currently hardware which detects the following errors is supported:
- System RAM errors (this is the original, and most mature part of the project) - many computers support RAM EDAC, (especially for chipsets which are aimed at high-reliability applications), but RAM which has extra storage capacity ("ECC RAM") is needed for these facilities to operate
- PCI bus transfer errors - the majority of PCI bridges, and peripherals support such error detection
Status
The EDAC code is expected to be in Linux Kernel version 2.6.16
History
The EDAC project was renamed from the "bluesmoke" prior to submission to the mainline Linux kernel. The Bluesmoke code was created by Thayne Harbaugh. The Linux-ECC project was EDAC's predecessor and its major inspiration. Developed by Dan Hollis and others, the Linux-ECC project is no longer maintained.
Supported Hardware
System Main Memory EDAC
Supported Memory Controllers
Please see the individual driver pages for information on supported revisions, motherboard-specific information etc.
Manufacturer | Model | EDAC Driver | Chipset Documentation | Controller Capabilities | Status | |
AMD | Opteron | k8 | EDAC, Error Scrub, Background Scrub | Supported (Linux 2.6.16) | ||
AMD | Athlon64 | k8 | EDAC, Error Scrub, Background Scrub | Supported (Linux 2.6.16) | ||
AMD | AthlonFX | k8 | EDAC, Error Scrub, Background Scrub | Supported (Linux 2.6.16) | ||
AMD | 760 | amd76x_edac.c | Supported (Linux 2.6.16) | |||
AMD | 762 | amd76x_edac.c | Supported (Linux 2.6.16) | |||
AMD | 768 | amd76x_edac.c | Supported (Linux 2.6.16) | |||
Intel | e7500 | Supported (Linux 2.6.16) | ||||
Intel | e7501 | Supported (Linux 2.6.16) | ||||
Intel | e7505 | Supported (Linux 2.6.16) | ||||
Intel | e7520 | Supported (Linux 2.6.16) | ||||
Intel | e7525 | Supported (Linux 2.6.16) | ||||
Intel | 82875p | Supported (Linux 2.6.16) | ||||
Intel | e7210 | Supported (Linux 2.6.16) | ||||
Intel | 82860 | Supported (Linux 2.6.16) | ||||
Radisys | 82600 | r82600_edac.c | EDAC, Error Scrub | Supported (Linux 2.6.16) |
PCI Error Reporting
PCI Parity error reporting facilities are included in the PCI specification, and the majority of add-in cards (and chips which are capable of being included in either add-in, or on-motherboard designs) support the PCI parity error detection, and reporting functionality. Some "fake" PCI devices which are not physically connected by a PCI bus (such as e.g. some ATA host adaptors which are built-in to a motherboard chipset) typically do not include the functionality.
Error Detection Overhead
The driver currently only support error detection via polling. Polling all of the PCI devices' error status registers can be time consuming, especially on machines which have many devices. You may wish to slow the error polling rate, or disable it altogether on such systems.
Faulty Hardware
Some PCI devices (or just particular revisions of those devices) are broken with respect to PCI parity detection, and display false positives. You can check (and add to) the list of broken devices on the PCIDevicesWithBrokenParityDetection page.
Related Articles
An overview of EDAC technologies on Wikipedia [1]
The original Linux ECC project (Dan Hollis et al) - [2]
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