On Tue, 02 Jun 2015 13:46:55 -0400 Gary Dale <garyd...@torfree.net> wrote:
> On 30/05/15 02:17 AM, Petter Adsen wrote: > > On Fri, 29 May 2015 13:18:17 -0600 > > Bob Proulx <b...@proulx.com> wrote: > > > >> Jochen Spieker wrote: > >>> Petter Adsen: > >>>> I'm starting to suspect that it is. Either that, or the > >>>> controller on the motherboard, which would be even worse. > >>> Or just the cable (if we are not talking about a laptop). I got > >>> rid of similar errors in the past by replacing the SATA cable. > >> If it were me I would swap cables and move to a different SATA > >> port on the motherboard. I have seen individual SATA ports fail > >> with the rest of the ports okay. I also have the advantage of > >> many different sets of hardware available and so I would mix and > >> match the various parts into different systems. If the problem > >> stays with the system or moves with the moved part is a good > >> diagnostic aid in determining which piece of hardware or software > >> is causing problems. In this case it is 1) the kernel software 2) > >> sata cable 3) sata device 4) motherboard sata controller. At > >> least one of those is the problem. It is a mental game of > >> Mastermind to determine which. > > From what I can understand of the messages above, it seems the > > error messages are coming from two different devices, ata4 and ata5 > > - or am I wrong? To me, that would (unfortunately) indicate the > > controller... > > > > Petter > > > Could potentially be a BIOS setting depending on how the BIOS numbers > its drives. The first 4 drives are usually set the same while the > last 2 can be set differently. Normally the first 4 should be set to > AHCI while the last 2 should be set to the same as the first 4. In my case it's 6 and 2, and all are set to AHCI. Petter -- "I'm ionized" "Are you sure?" "I'm positive."
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