Description of problem: Right now, if we boot into a kernel with kvmclock eanbled, and then reboot into a kernel with kvmclock disabled (rebooting with no-kvmclock kernel option is enough), we'll see the second kernel crash with random memory corruption. This indicates that kvmclock is still writing to the old memory location, which will now contain something else entirely. Version-Release number of selected component (if applicable): all, including upstream How reproducible: Always Steps to Reproduce: 1. boot a kernel with kvmclock enabled 2. reboot 3. pause grub in the OS selection screen, edit parameters, and remove kvmclock Actual results: Crash Expected results: Work.
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Fedora 13 changed to end-of-life (EOL) status on 2011-06-25. Fedora 13 is no longer maintained, which means that it will not receive any further security or bug fix updates. As a result we are closing this bug. If you can reproduce this bug against a currently maintained version of Fedora please feel free to reopen this bug against that version. Thank you for reporting this bug and we are sorry it could not be fixed.