From: Tim Gowen on 19 May 2010 15:06 Jim <jim(a)magrathea.plus.com> wrote: > Tim Gowen <tim(a)nospam.demon.co.uk> wrote: > > > > Doubt it. There was also some mention of Cisco VPN client. Would that > > > apply? > > > > Yep, I use that. > > It's possibly a red herring, but see if there's an updated version of > it. > > <http://discussions.apple.com/thread.jspa?threadID=2151413&start=15&tsta > rt=-1> I also have a LaCie Firewire drive, if Firewire is a potential cause... I will try and get an open source VPN client to work. -- Tim Gowen
From: Chris Ridd on 19 May 2010 15:21 On 2010-05-19 20:06:04 +0100, Tim Gowen said: > Jim <jim(a)magrathea.plus.com> wrote: > >> Tim Gowen <tim(a)nospam.demon.co.uk> wrote: >> >>>> Doubt it. There was also some mention of Cisco VPN client. Would that >>>> apply? >>> >>> Yep, I use that. >> >> It's possibly a red herring, but see if there's an updated version of >> it. >> >> <http://discussions.apple.com/thread.jspa?threadID=2151413&start=15&tsta >> rt=-1> > > I also have a LaCie Firewire drive, if Firewire is a potential cause... > > I will try and get an open source VPN client to work. The panic implicated thread scheduling, and configd was the process running the current thread. Configd handles network configuration changes, so it is more likely related to your Cisco ipsec driver. What's com.google.driver.Gild? A google for it reveals a lot of kernel panic-related hits :-( -- Chris
From: Peter Ceresole on 19 May 2010 15:29 Tim Gowen <tim(a)nospam.demon.co.uk> wrote: > I also have a LaCie Firewire drive, if Firewire is a potential cause... For what it's worth, since I've been using OS10 I've only seen this kind of behaviour (KP on startup) caused by a faulty USB hub. I'm not saying that's your problem, but USB is the first place I'd look. -- Peter
From: Paul Womar on 19 May 2010 16:14 Tim Gowen <tim(a)nospam.demon.co.uk> wrote: > Jim <jim(a)magrathea.plus.com> wrote: > > > > > There was also some mention of Cisco VPN client. Would that > > > > apply? > > I will try and get an open source VPN client to work. I vaguely recall there being some noise about the Cisco VPN client and 10.6 early on. You don't need a client though as Max OS X natively supports Cisco VPN since 10.6, I use it without issue here, in fact it connects in sub-second speeds, my Windows machine with the native client is noticably slower. To remove the whole Cisco branded stuff run "sudo /usr/local/bin/vpn_uninstall" from the terminal. If you need to recover the encoded password from the PCF file you can use this site: http://www.unix-ag.uni-kl.de/~massar/bin/cisco-decode. -- -> The email address used in this message *IS* valid <-
From: Tim Gowen on 20 May 2010 12:03 Chris Ridd <chrisridd(a)mac.com> wrote: > The panic implicated thread scheduling, and configd was the process > running the current thread. Configd handles network configuration > changes, so it is more likely related to your Cisco ipsec driver. Is there an alternative that will work with my config file for the Cisco VPN client? > What's com.google.driver.Gild? A google for it reveals a lot of kernel > panic-related hits :-( I have removed the Google updater. Tim -- Tim Gowen
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