On Sunday December 2, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
>
> Anyway, the problems are back: To test my theory that everything is
> alright with the CPU running within its specs, I removed one of the
> drives while copying some large files yesterday. Initially, everything
> seemed to work out nicely, and by the morning, the rebuild had finished.
> Again, I unmounted the filesystem and ran badblocks -svn on the LVM. It
> ran without gripes for some hours, but just now I saw md had started to
> rebuild the array again out of the blue:
>
> Dec 1 20:04:49 quassel kernel: usb 4-5.2: reset high speed USB device
> using ehci_hcd and address 4
> Dec 2 01:06:02 quassel kernel: md: data-check of RAID array md0
^^^^^^^^^^
> Dec 2 01:06:02 quassel kernel: md: minimum _guaranteed_ speed: 1000
> KB/sec/disk.
> Dec 2 01:06:02 quassel kernel: md: using maximum available idle IO
> bandwidth (but not more than 200000 KB/sec) for data-check.
^^^^^^^^^^
> Dec 2 01:06:02 quassel kernel: md: using 128k window, over a total of
> 488383936 blocks.
> Dec 2 03:57:24 quassel kernel: usb 4-5.2: reset high speed USB device
> using ehci_hcd and address 4
>
This isn't a resync, it is a data check. "Dec 2" is the first Sunday
of the month. You probably have a crontab entries that does
echo check > /sys/block/mdX/md/sync_action
early on the first Sunday of the month. I know that Debian does this.
It is good to do this occasionally to catch sleeping bad blocks.
NeilBrown
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