Re: [CentOS] PATA Hard Drive woes
On 11/20/10 4:12 PM, Keith Roberts wrote: > > So it appears the onboard IDE controller is working OK, and > the problem appears to be from the IDE ribbon cable, to one > of the HDD caddies. > > Any suggs please? Errr, if you have established that you have a bad cable, isn't the obvious solution to replace it? Be sure it is an 80-wire cable and connected correctly (they are usually keyed, but not always). -- Les Mikesell lesmikes...@gmail.com ___ CentOS mailing list CentOS@centos.org http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos
Re: [CentOS] PATA Hard Drive woes
Well I'm geting there slowly but surely. This home-built server machine is using hard drive caddies. I've taken my working backup drive from the caddy (secondary master), and replaced it with a small GB test drive. The problem was originally with the drive connected to the onboard IDE primary channel being intermittently autodetected at boot time. I have now swopped the IDE ribbon cables, so the cable that was connected to the primary IDE channel is now plugged into the secondary channel onboard IDE socket, and vice versa for the secondary ribbon cable. Now when I reboot the machine the problem of drives not being detected now appears on the secondary channel, and the ATA drive and CD/DVD-ROM drive are detected OK on the primary channel. I have also replaced the IDE ribbon cable for the channel that was originally connected as primary. So it appears the onboard IDE controller is working OK, and the problem appears to be from the IDE ribbon cable, to one of the HDD caddies. Any suggs please? Kind Regards, Keith Roberts -- In theory, theory and practice are the same; in practice they are not. This email was sent from my laptop with Centos 5.5 ___ CentOS mailing list CentOS@centos.org http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos
Re: [CentOS] PATA Hard Drive woes
>From: Keith Roberts >On Wed, 3 Nov 2010, Lamar Owen wrote: >> Might want to check the power supply as well. Bad/flakey >> power can indeed case damage to the drive surface; been >> there, done that, have two Maxtor 250GB drives with >> scribbled servo data to prove it. >OK. > I'm running the server from an APC UPS Back-UPS 650, so > there should not be any glitches in the power supply, should > there? Probably not on the AC side, although the Back-UPS 650 isn't a full online UPS but a switching standby UPS (full online, like the APC Symmetra 16KVA units I have here) rectify to DC, float the batteries at all times, and run the output from inverter all of the time (unless they're switched to bypass). The SmartUPS 1400RM I had in front of the PC that suffered the glitchy power is, unless I'm mistaken, also a full online pure sinewave UPS like the Symmetra, and is still in service (I checked its output on my oscilloscope first, though). No, I was referring to the output DC voltages (+12V, +5V, +3.3V,-5V, and -12V) from the power supply inside the system. In addition to my own personal RAID1 of 250GB drives, I also, a different time, lost a RAID5 array of 15K 36GB SCSI drives in a Dell 1600SC server; testing the power supply showed lots of noise and complete dropouts of a few milliseconds duration on the drive connectors' 5V supply pins. Completely and thoroughly scrambled the servo data on the Hitachi drives. Meaning they didn't just start showing bad sectors; they started getting seek errors. The 5V line on the drive connectors was reading an AC RMS of 4V superimposed on the +5V, yielding an effective DC voltage of 4V. Happened over a period of three weeks, during which time I had a number of mysterious failures (the Hitachi drives were error-correcting so well that by the time they started reporting errors, it was way past too late, and it became impossible for the Hitachi drives to even power up). I found that the power supply in question, upon investigation, provided the motherboard (where the DC power sensors on tha t box are) with clean 5V, and the drives were powered from a separate 5V rail, meaning the Dell management system wasn't seeing the power problems. A simple power supply tester with a built-in meter can be bought for less than $20; a more thorough power analyzer will run more than that. But even the simple one caught the failing Dell 1600SC supply. It took an oscilloscope to test the Antec in my personal box; turned out it was a cold solder joint in the Antec. A new power supply is less expensive than the equivalent labor it took to fix the Antec. I keep a known good 500W ATX 12V server-grade (8 pin 12V plug with adapters, and 24-pin ATX plug with 20-pin adapter) around for testing; that's one of the very first things I check when a PC is brought in that is flaky. (The very first thing is the dust accumulation, and the second thing is the heatsink compound). One of the first things I do on any CentOS system I put together is install lm_sensors and gkrellm (gkrellm from a third-party repo). I then enable all the motherboard sensors that are available in the gkrellm plugins, and run it (either local GUI or through ssh X forwarding to my central monitoring PC). On supermicro boards I install SuperODoctor for Linux, available on the supermicro site. The GUI runs well (there are some odd dependencies, however) and will e-mail you on alarm conditions that you can set. These include fan RPM, temperatures, and voltages. The CLI program isn't quite so sophisticated, but it can be run periodically and the result sent by e-mail for health checks. Drives that are having trouble will show up with high iowaits; run iostat (from the sysstat package) and look at the await result. Long awaits mean the drive is having trouble (or it has firmware issues like WD's EARS and EADS drives have in RAID configurations). ___ CentOS mailing list CentOS@centos.org http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos
Re: [CentOS] PATA Hard Drive woes
At Wed, 3 Nov 2010 22:13:03 + (GMT) CentOS mailing list wrote: > > On Wed, 3 Nov 2010, Lamar Owen wrote: > > > To: CentOS mailing list > > From: Lamar Owen > > Subject: Re: [CentOS] PATA Hard Drive woes > > > > On Wednesday, November 03, 2010 02:51:02 pm RedShift wrote: > >> On 11/03/10 17:01, Keith Roberts wrote: > >>> Could a bad controller or bad RAM cause Hard Drive sector > >>> errors? > >>> > >> > >> Neither bad RAM or a bad controllor can physically damage > >> a hard drive. A bad controller will not cause reallocated > >> sectors. It can however cause UDMA CRC errors and other > >> weird non-SMART related behaviour. > > > > Might want to check the power supply as well. Bad/flakey > > power can indeed case damage to the drive surface; been > > there, done that, have two Maxtor 250GB drives with > > scribbled servo data to prove it. > > OK. > > I'm running the server from an APC UPS Back-UPS 650, so > there should not be any glitches in the power supply, should > there? Unless the power supply itself is failing. > > Keith > -- Robert Heller -- 978-544-6933 / hel...@deepsoft.com Deepwoods Software-- http://www.deepsoft.com/ () ascii ribbon campaign -- against html e-mail /\ www.asciiribbon.org -- against proprietary attachments ___ CentOS mailing list CentOS@centos.org http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos
Re: [CentOS] PATA Hard Drive woes
On 11/3/2010 4:18 PM, Keith Roberts wrote: > I might shell out some dosh for a copy if it can > non-destructably repair bad sectors. Try fsck -cc first. (Or badblocks -n) These do part of what SR does already, so if they work, that's all you need. Step up only when you need something that tries harder. :) ___ CentOS mailing list CentOS@centos.org http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos
Re: [CentOS] PATA Hard Drive woes
On 11/03/2010 03:13 PM, Keith Roberts wrote: > On Wed, 3 Nov 2010, Lamar Owen wrote: >> Might want to check the power supply as well. Bad/flakey >> power can indeed case damage to the drive surface; been >> there, done that, have two Maxtor 250GB drives with >> scribbled servo data to prove it. > OK. > > I'm running the server from an APC UPS Back-UPS 650, so > there should not be any glitches in the power supply, should > there? Lamar was probably talking about the machine's *own* power supply. The one inside the computer case. When they start to fail they can produce incorrect DC voltages and then you can get all kinds of weird failures. -- Benjamin Franz ___ CentOS mailing list CentOS@centos.org http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos
Re: [CentOS] PATA Hard Drive woes
On 11/03/10 3:13 PM, Keith Roberts wrote: > I'm running the server from an APC UPS Back-UPS 650, so > there should not be any glitches in the power supply, should > there? thats a simple standby kind of UPS, acts like a 'surge protector' when the AC is on, and only switches to the battery powered inverter when the AC is completely off. ___ CentOS mailing list CentOS@centos.org http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos
Re: [CentOS] PATA Hard Drive woes
On Wed, 3 Nov 2010, Warren Young wrote: > To: CentOS mailing list > From: Warren Young > Subject: Re: [CentOS] PATA Hard Drive woes > > On 11/3/2010 8:32 AM, Keith Roberts wrote: >> >> So to prepare the disk for returning under warranty, I used >> another HDD utility to clean the disk again > > ... > >> So I ran an Advanced r/w scan again with Hitachi DFT, and >> the result was OK. > > A complete disk wipe brings bad sectors to the drive's attention, > forcing it to remap them using spare sectors set aside for the purpose. > > All drives can do this, and they do it without logging the change. You > can't tell, from the outside, when or whether the drive has done this. > All you can do is infer it, because a sector that once tested bad now > tests good. > > As to why this happened only during a format, not during the previous > disk test, it's probably because the format zeroed the disk. That > particular drive may have a policy to only remap sectors on write, so as > to preserve the sector contents for potential recovery later. (See > below for one way this can be done.) > > It may be that your drive is now fine. > > If you put it back into service, at minimum I would set up smartd, from > the smartmontools package. Maybe run smartctl on it by hand daily or > weekly, too. If you find that errors start happening again, there is > something continually degrading the drive's integrity, so the automatic > sector remapping will eventually run the drive out of spare sectors. > > SpinRite (http://spinrite.com/) does nondestructive sector remapping. > At level 4 and above, it reads each sector in and then writes it back > out to the drive. Because remapping is silent, it's possible for it to > appear to do nothing, yet improve data integrity by bringing dodgy > sectors to the drive's attention. > > If a sector can't be read without error, SpinRite forces the drive to > ignore the CRC and return the data anyway, retrying many times, then > making a statistical guess about the most likely contents of the sector. > (Reading a bad sector won't necessarily give the same value each try.) > Then on writing the reconstructed data back out, the drive > automatically remaps the sector, repairing it. > > You might want to combine the SMART monitoring with periodic SpinRite > runs on the drive until you regain confidence in it. Thanks Warren. I've read good reports about SpinRite. I might shell out some dosh for a copy if it can non-destructably repair bad sectors. I heard it's worth running just to keep your HDD's in shape. Regards, Keith ___ CentOS mailing list CentOS@centos.org http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos
Re: [CentOS] PATA Hard Drive woes
On Wed, 3 Nov 2010, Lamar Owen wrote: > To: CentOS mailing list > From: Lamar Owen > Subject: Re: [CentOS] PATA Hard Drive woes > > On Wednesday, November 03, 2010 02:51:02 pm RedShift wrote: >> On 11/03/10 17:01, Keith Roberts wrote: >>> Could a bad controller or bad RAM cause Hard Drive sector >>> errors? >>> >> >> Neither bad RAM or a bad controllor can physically damage >> a hard drive. A bad controller will not cause reallocated >> sectors. It can however cause UDMA CRC errors and other >> weird non-SMART related behaviour. > > Might want to check the power supply as well. Bad/flakey > power can indeed case damage to the drive surface; been > there, done that, have two Maxtor 250GB drives with > scribbled servo data to prove it. OK. I'm running the server from an APC UPS Back-UPS 650, so there should not be any glitches in the power supply, should there? Keith -- In theory, theory and practice are the same; in practice they are not. This email was sent from my laptop with Centos 5.5 ___ CentOS mailing list CentOS@centos.org http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos
Re: [CentOS] PATA Hard Drive woes
On Wednesday, November 03, 2010 02:51:02 pm RedShift wrote: > On 11/03/10 17:01, Keith Roberts wrote: > > Could a bad controller or bad RAM cause Hard Drive sector > > errors? > > > > Neither bad RAM or a bad controllor can physically damage a hard drive. A bad > controller will not cause reallocated sectors. It can however cause UDMA CRC > errors and other weird non-SMART related behaviour. Might want to check the power supply as well. Bad/flakey power can indeed case damage to the drive surface; been there, done that, have two Maxtor 250GB drives with scribbled servo data to prove it. ___ CentOS mailing list CentOS@centos.org http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos
Re: [CentOS] PATA Hard Drive woes
On Wed, 3 Nov 2010, RedShift wrote: > To: CentOS mailing list > From: RedShift > Subject: Re: [CentOS] PATA Hard Drive woes > > On 11/03/10 17:01, Keith Roberts wrote: >> >> There were no sectors remapped, which is odd as there were >> bad sectors originally on the drive. I ran MemTest86+ out of >> curiousity, and there are 5120 Errors, some at 0.4MB& 0.5 >> MB. >> > > You should fix that first. Working on that one now ;) >> The BIOS has been playing up, not recognising the Primary >> Master drive. This is the channel the Hitachi disk was on >> when it developed the sector read errors. >> >> Could a bad controller or bad RAM cause Hard Drive sector >> errors? >> > > Neither bad RAM or a bad controllor can physically damage > a hard drive. A bad controller will not cause reallocated > sectors. It can however cause UDMA CRC errors and other > weird non-SMART related behaviour. > >> The drive is as good as uninstalled, so I may as well send >> it for replacement. >> > > Send the output of smartctl -a /dev/yourdisk, that'll give us more factual > data than speculation. Will do as soon as the memory checks are done, and the machine is up again. Keith ___ CentOS mailing list CentOS@centos.org http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos
Re: [CentOS] PATA Hard Drive woes
On 11/03/10 17:01, Keith Roberts wrote: > > There were no sectors remapped, which is odd as there were > bad sectors originally on the drive. I ran MemTest86+ out of > curiousity, and there are 5120 Errors, some at 0.4MB& 0.5 > MB. > You should fix that first. > The BIOS has been playing up, not recognising the Primary > Master drive. This is the channel the Hitachi disk was on > when it developed the sector read errors. > > Could a bad controller or bad RAM cause Hard Drive sector > errors? > Neither bad RAM or a bad controllor can physically damage a hard drive. A bad controller will not cause reallocated sectors. It can however cause UDMA CRC errors and other weird non-SMART related behaviour. > The drive is as good as uninstalled, so I may as well send > it for replacement. > Send the output of smartctl -a /dev/yourdisk, that'll give us more factual data than speculation. ___ CentOS mailing list CentOS@centos.org http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos
Re: [CentOS] PATA Hard Drive woes
On 11/3/2010 11:27 AM, m.r...@5-cent.us wrote: > Yeah, but I have problems with smartmon: More likely, problems with SMART. S.M.A.R.T. is D.U.M.B. :) It's better than nothing, but sometimes not by a whole lot. > one server that's got two bad sectors, which SMART reports. I've followed > the instructions on how to make the log messages go away, and fsck -c... > but on reboot, SMART seems to ignore what badblocks found, and the > irritating messages are back. It may be that SpinRite could fix that by forcing a remap. Another option -- which I didn't mention because it probably isn't an option for the original poster, but which may work with your servers -- is that some high-end RAID systems can do something like SpinRite at level 4+, as can ZFS. They call it resilvering. I don't think these systems do statistical reconstruction, but periodic read-then-rewrite can stave off the need to reconstruct. ___ CentOS mailing list CentOS@centos.org http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos
Re: [CentOS] PATA Hard Drive woes
Warren Young wrote: > On 11/3/2010 8:32 AM, Keith Roberts wrote: >> >> So to prepare the disk for returning under warranty, I used >> another HDD utility to clean the disk again > > ... > >> So I ran an Advanced r/w scan again with Hitachi DFT, and >> the result was OK. > > A complete disk wipe brings bad sectors to the drive's attention, > forcing it to remap them using spare sectors set aside for the purpose. > If you put it back into service, at minimum I would set up smartd, from > the smartmontools package. Maybe run smartctl on it by hand daily or > weekly, too. If you find that errors start happening again, there is > something continually degrading the drive's integrity, so the automatic > sector remapping will eventually run the drive out of spare sectors. Yeah, but I have problems with smartmon: for example, I've got a drive in one server that's got two bad sectors, which SMART reports. I've followed the instructions on how to make the log messages go away, and fsck -c... but on reboot, SMART seems to ignore what badblocks found, and the irritating messages are back. mark ___ CentOS mailing list CentOS@centos.org http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos
Re: [CentOS] PATA Hard Drive woes
On 11/3/2010 8:32 AM, Keith Roberts wrote: > > So to prepare the disk for returning under warranty, I used > another HDD utility to clean the disk again ... > So I ran an Advanced r/w scan again with Hitachi DFT, and > the result was OK. A complete disk wipe brings bad sectors to the drive's attention, forcing it to remap them using spare sectors set aside for the purpose. All drives can do this, and they do it without logging the change. You can't tell, from the outside, when or whether the drive has done this. All you can do is infer it, because a sector that once tested bad now tests good. As to why this happened only during a format, not during the previous disk test, it's probably because the format zeroed the disk. That particular drive may have a policy to only remap sectors on write, so as to preserve the sector contents for potential recovery later. (See below for one way this can be done.) It may be that your drive is now fine. If you put it back into service, at minimum I would set up smartd, from the smartmontools package. Maybe run smartctl on it by hand daily or weekly, too. If you find that errors start happening again, there is something continually degrading the drive's integrity, so the automatic sector remapping will eventually run the drive out of spare sectors. SpinRite (http://spinrite.com/) does nondestructive sector remapping. At level 4 and above, it reads each sector in and then writes it back out to the drive. Because remapping is silent, it's possible for it to appear to do nothing, yet improve data integrity by bringing dodgy sectors to the drive's attention. If a sector can't be read without error, SpinRite forces the drive to ignore the CRC and return the data anyway, retrying many times, then making a statistical guess about the most likely contents of the sector. (Reading a bad sector won't necessarily give the same value each try.) Then on writing the reconstructed data back out, the drive automatically remaps the sector, repairing it. You might want to combine the SMART monitoring with periodic SpinRite runs on the drive until you regain confidence in it. ___ CentOS mailing list CentOS@centos.org http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos
Re: [CentOS] PATA Hard Drive woes
On Wed, 3 Nov 2010, Todd Denniston wrote: > To: CentOS mailing list > From: Todd Denniston > Subject: Re: [CentOS] PATA Hard Drive woes > > Keith Roberts wrote, On 11/03/2010 10:32 AM: >> On Sun, 31 Oct 2010, Keith Roberts wrote: >> > >> There were about 79 Seek errors in the SMART logs of the >> HDD. >> > >> vivard did not show any errors when doing a full disk erase. >> >> So I ran an Advanced r/w scan again with Hitachi DFT, and >> the result was OK. >> >> Any ideas what's happening please? > > WFG: In writing it all, the seek motor knocked the dust > out of it's way? (what dust?) How about checking all the > smart attributes and seeing if others are elevated. > http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/S.M.A.R.T.#Known_ATA_S.M.A.R.T._attributes > > Are you seeing any block "remap" activity? > http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hard_disk_drive#Error_handling > >> >> Is this disk usable, or is it still in need of replacing? >> > > http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/S.M.A.R.T.#Background You > have gotten SMART errors from this drive already, so: You > have to ask yourself, 'Do you feel lucky?', Well do y'a... > > And the other question: If this drive up and dies shortly > and I knew about the smart errors, will the data owner > complain more or less to me about the drive death later or > drive replacement hassle now? > > Only YOU (and the data owner) know the risk trade-off > levels you have to consider. > Thanks Todd for the reply. There were no sectors remapped, which is odd as there were bad sectors originally on the drive. I ran MemTest86+ out of curiousity, and there are 5120 Errors, some at 0.4MB & 0.5 MB. The BIOS has been playing up, not recognising the Primary Master drive. This is the channel the Hitachi disk was on when it developed the sector read errors. Could a bad controller or bad RAM cause Hard Drive sector errors? The drive is as good as uninstalled, so I may as well send it for replacement. Regards, Keith NB: The box is down now, and I'll try and test and identify the bad memory module next. ___ CentOS mailing list CentOS@centos.org http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos
Re: [CentOS] PATA Hard Drive woes
Keith Roberts wrote, On 11/03/2010 10:32 AM: > On Sun, 31 Oct 2010, Keith Roberts wrote: > > There were about 79 Seek errors in the SMART logs of the > HDD. > > vivard did not show any errors when doing a full disk erase. > > So I ran an Advanced r/w scan again with Hitachi DFT, and > the result was OK. > > Any ideas what's happening please? WFG: In writing it all, the seek motor knocked the dust out of it's way? (what dust?) How about checking all the smart attributes and seeing if others are elevated. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/S.M.A.R.T.#Known_ATA_S.M.A.R.T._attributes Are you seeing any block "remap" activity? http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hard_disk_drive#Error_handling > > Is this disk usable, or is it still in need of replacing? > http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/S.M.A.R.T.#Background You have gotten SMART errors from this drive already, so: You have to ask yourself, 'Do you feel lucky?', Well do y'a... And the other question: If this drive up and dies shortly and I knew about the smart errors, will the data owner complain more or less to me about the drive death later or drive replacement hassle now? Only YOU (and the data owner) know the risk trade-off levels you have to consider. -- Todd Denniston Crane Division, Naval Surface Warfare Center (NSWC Crane) Harnessing the Power of Technology for the Warfighter ___ CentOS mailing list CentOS@centos.org http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos
Re: [CentOS] PATA Hard Drive woes
On Sun, 31 Oct 2010, Keith Roberts wrote: > To: CentOS mailing list > From: Keith Roberts > Subject: Re: [CentOS] PATA Hard Drive woes > > On Sun, 31 Oct 2010, William Warren wrote: > >> To: CentOS mailing list >> From: William Warren >> Subject: Re: [CentOS] PATA Hard Drive woes >> >> On 10/31/2010 3:27 PM, Keith Roberts wrote: >>> Hi All. >>> >>> Yesterday I was installing Centos 5.5 to my web server, and >>> it looks like the main hard drive has gone AWOL. >>> >>> Fedora 12 put the file system into r/o mode. >>> >>> The drive is an Hitachi, still under warranty. >>> >>> There are bad sectors on it, and running the Hitachi DFT >>> tool confirms this. Also I cannot repair the bad sectors. >>> >>> Would this be caused by a faulty I/O chip, or is it safe to >>> say it's definately the HDD at fault? >>> >>> Kind Regards, >>> >>> Keith Roberts >>> >> hdd at fault > > OK - thanks for confirming that Bill. > > I'll remove it and take it back for replacement. > > Keith There were about 79 Seek errors in the SMART logs of the HDD. I moved the drive from the Primary Master cable, to the Secondary Master cable, and I ran Hitachi's DFT tool, did a complete disk erase, and that terminated with errors. So to prepare the disk for returning under warranty, I used another HDD utility to clean the disk again, still on Sec Master cable. I used vivard 0.4 to do a complete disk erase. That was on the http://www.ultimatebootcd.com/index.html Under HDD utils. vivard did not show any errors when doing a full disk erase. So I ran an Advanced r/w scan again with Hitachi DFT, and the result was OK. Any ideas what's happening please? Is this disk usable, or is it still in need of replacing? Kind Regards, Keith Roberts ___ CentOS mailing list CentOS@centos.org http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos
Re: [CentOS] PATA Hard Drive woes
On Sun, 31 Oct 2010, William Warren wrote: > To: CentOS mailing list > From: William Warren > Subject: Re: [CentOS] PATA Hard Drive woes > > On 10/31/2010 3:27 PM, Keith Roberts wrote: >> Hi All. >> >> Yesterday I was installing Centos 5.5 to my web server, and >> it looks like the main hard drive has gone AWOL. >> >> Fedora 12 put the file system into r/o mode. >> >> The drive is an Hitachi, still under warranty. >> >> There are bad sectors on it, and running the Hitachi DFT >> tool confirms this. Also I cannot repair the bad sectors. >> >> Would this be caused by a faulty I/O chip, or is it safe to >> say it's definately the HDD at fault? >> >> Kind Regards, >> >> Keith Roberts >> > hdd at fault OK - thanks for confirming that Bill. I'll remove it and take it back for replacement. Keith ___ CentOS mailing list CentOS@centos.org http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos
Re: [CentOS] PATA Hard Drive woes
On 10/31/2010 3:27 PM, Keith Roberts wrote: > Hi All. > > Yesterday I was installing Centos 5.5 to my web server, and > it looks like the main hard drive has gone AWOL. > > Fedora 12 put the file system into r/o mode. > > The drive is an Hitachi, still under warranty. > > There are bad sectors on it, and running the Hitachi DFT > tool confirms this. Also I cannot repair the bad sectors. > > Would this be caused by a faulty I/O chip, or is it safe to > say it's definately the HDD at fault? > > Kind Regards, > > Keith Roberts > hdd at fault ___ CentOS mailing list CentOS@centos.org http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos
[CentOS] PATA Hard Drive woes
Hi All. Yesterday I was installing Centos 5.5 to my web server, and it looks like the main hard drive has gone AWOL. Fedora 12 put the file system into r/o mode. The drive is an Hitachi, still under warranty. There are bad sectors on it, and running the Hitachi DFT tool confirms this. Also I cannot repair the bad sectors. Would this be caused by a faulty I/O chip, or is it safe to say it's definately the HDD at fault? Kind Regards, Keith Roberts -- In theory, theory and practice are the same; in practice they are not. This email was sent from my laptop with Centos 5.5 ___ CentOS mailing list CentOS@centos.org http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos