

- #Error code 0x00000004 mac wow client how to
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Interval Since Last Panic Report: 2280 secĪnonymous UUID: E1843A0F-F5B9-45FC-B85E-C95CEE78EB4E I’ve opened up a report at and they’ve requested my kernel crash logs which are in /Library/Logs/Diagnostic…. So I unplugged the SSD drives from the 2 hidden SATA ports and set about using 10.6.8 and Lion (each OS on a different RAID partition) but still both were rebooting because of a kernel panic. The MacPro 1,1 came with 4x drive sled bays for SATA hard drives but there were also another 2x hidden SATA ports on the motherboard that I connected the SSD drives to and mounted them in the spare optical bay. I thought it might be that 10.6.8 and Lion didn’t like the SSD drives that were still mounted even though they weren’t the boot drives.
#Error code 0x00000004 mac wow client install
Even the fresh install of Lion was showing a random kernel panic every 5minutes to an hour and rebooting the system.
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When Lion was released I decided to not take a chance upgrading my stable 10.6.7 and so I wiped 2 of the drives I had in a RAID array and installed a fresh copy of Lion which I downloaded from the App Store (if you want to know how to create a bootable Lion install from Apples Lion download leave a comment and I’ll post that soon). I thought it might just be a *glitch* with 10.6.8 and patiently waited for Lion. I rolled back my 10.6.8 to 10.6.7 using a TimeMachine backup and everything was stable again. I have a second OS X 10.6.7 for emegency situations, booted into that and ran that for a few days and it was all fine. The system now erratically rebooted itself and a look at the logs showed Kernel Panics all over the place.
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Then Apple released a Snow Leopard update 10.6.8 to “ready you for Lion” so I dutifully upgraded the 10.6.7 I had installed on my SSD’s and it all went terribly wrong. My Snow Leopard 10.6.7 install was nice and stable, not a single crash/hang/kernel panic or reboot. I threw some SSD’s in a RAID array in there for good measure too and the combination of those two things made a phenomenal difference to the rendering times. I found a matching pair of cheap E5345 QUAD core processors on eBay and fitted them (that’s another post that will be on here soon along with photos of the CPU swap out process). Some recent projects I’ve been involved in have required some serious processing power to render gigapixel images and the original 2xDual Core XEONs weren’t up to it. I bought my MacPro (MacPro 1,1) in September 2006 and nearly 5 years down the line it’s still going strong, or at least it was.
