Scheduled Maintenance: We are aware of an issue with Google, AOL, and Yahoo services as email providers which are blocking new registrations. We are trying to fix the issue and we have several internal and external support tickets in process to resolve the issue. Please see: viewtopic.php?t=158230
06.06.2023, 00:28:21 kernel: [36871.854449] EDID block 0 is all zeroes
06.06.2023, 00:28:21 kernel: [36871.824177] EDID block 0 is all zeroes
06.06.2023, 00:28:11 kernel: [36861.614517] EDID block 0 is all zeroes
06.06.2023, 00:28:11 kernel: [36861.584244] EDID block 0 is all zeroes
06.06.2023, 00:28:01 kernel: [36851.375125] EDID block 0 is all zeroes
06.06.2023, 00:28:01 kernel: [36851.345114] EDID block 0 is all zeroes
06.06.2023, 00:27:51 kernel: [36841.134496] EDID block 0 is all zeroes
06.06.2023, 00:27:51 kernel: [36841.104046] EDID block 0 is all zeroes
06.06.2023, 00:27:40 kernel: [36830.864367] EDID block 0 is all zeroes
The circle is complete. In forum OMV, I am sent to forum Debian, and in forum Debian, I am sent to forum OMV.
The problem is clearly in the kernel. Where do core gurus reside? I hope for help.
GalayZloy wrote: ↑2023-06-07 06:52
The circle is complete. In forum OMV, I am sent to forum Debian, and in forum Debian, I am sent to forum OMV.
The problem is clearly in the kernel. Where do core gurus reside? I hope for help.
I guess next time you will know to not identify as "derived from debian".
GalayZloy wrote: ↑2023-06-07 06:52
The problem is clearly in the kernel.
The error is reported by the kernel (for example, [1]), but it does not necessarily mean that is caused by the kernel.
The error message tells that there's something wrong in the EDID [2] frame received by the computer from the monitor. The EDID protocol is used to let the computer know about the monitor's characteristics. This could be caused by faulty connections (e.g. cable, ports, adapter) between computer and external monitor or by a defective external monitor.
You could check/replace cables and physical connection between computer and monitor.
Dai_trying wrote: ↑2023-06-07 08:02
A friendly suggestion, could you install Debian and see if you still have the same issue?
I will consider this option, thx.
Random_Troll wrote: ↑2023-06-07 15:48
Are there any actual problems or is this just about log spam?
Just spam. But I'm not sure about any interrupts or anything serious causing the problem.
Aki wrote: ↑2023-06-07 16:42
The error message tells that there's something wrong in the EDID [2] frame received by the computer from the monitor. The EDID protocol is used to let the computer know about the monitor's characteristics. This could be caused by faulty connections (e.g. cable, ports, adapter) between computer and external monitor or by a defective external monitor.
You could check/replace cables and physical connection between computer and monitor.
Its my home server, and it have not monitor. But monitor was connected during OS installations.
I grow tired of this thread. There is an xorg.conf setting to disable the EDID inquiry. Set it, then look up the monitor timings for your monitor and set them manually in the same file under the Monitor section.
Yikes! It has no monitor? Then you shouldn't be booting to graphical.target. You should be booting to multi-user.target instead.
Of course X is going to complain about invalid EDID! You don't have a monitor attached!
Package: edid-decode
Version: 0.1~git20201230.95d81c9-2
Installed-Size: 299KB
Maintainer: Andrej Shadura <andrewsh@debian.org>
Architecture: amd64
Depends ▼
libc6 (>=2.29), libgcc-s1 (>=3.0), libstdc++6 (>=5.2)
Description-en: decode the binary EDID information from monitors
EDID is binary data encoded in the monitor firmware, which the kernel
exposes via /sys/devices/.../drm/card*/card*/edid. edid-decode renders
this binary data into a human-readable text form.
Homepage: https://git.linuxtv.org/edid-decode.git/
Tag: hardware::detection, hardware::video, interface::commandline,
role::program, scope::utility, use::configuring
Section: x11
Priority: optional
Filename: pool/main/e/edid-decode/edid-decode_0.1~git20201230.95d81c9-2_amd64.deb
Size: 101KB
GalayZloy wrote: ↑2023-06-06 20:27Any ideas how to fix it?
Did you try blocking the video driver? That suggestion is in your linked thread. If the video driver isn't loaded then the kernel won't try to find an EDID block.
Jeder nach seinen Fähigkeiten, jedem nach seinen Bedürfnissen.
MB have VGA an HDMI ports, video integrated in processor Intel Celeron J1800. When I installed the OS, the monitor was connected to HDMI. Now all ports are free.
Last edited by GalayZloy on 2023-06-09 11:13, edited 1 time in total.
Random_Troll wrote: ↑2023-06-08 16:20
Did you try blocking the video driver? That suggestion is in your linked thread. If the video driver isn't loaded then the kernel won't try to find an EDID block.
Random_Troll wrote: ↑2023-06-09 15:22
Just as in your linked thread.
There is solution in this thread "isolating the iGPU from the kernel and the error does not appear", but the solution is done via GUI. How to isolating the iGPU via terminal? I didn't find a solution to this problem on the Internet, and my knowledge is not enough.
It's the command block given in the first post in your linked thread. It didn't work for the OP because they had another card but it should work for you. I'm not typing it out here again, that would be a pointless waste of time.
Jeder nach seinen Fähigkeiten, jedem nach seinen Bedürfnissen.