I guess I'll just leave it as is, its my office fileserver so its
probably not to bright to be messing with it anyway :-D
Frank
Mark Knecht wrote:
Right. Try sdparm instead:
lightning ~ # sdparm /dev/sda
/dev/sda: ATA ST3250823AS 3.03
Read write error recovery mode page:
AWRE
Right. Try sdparm instead:
lightning ~ # sdparm /dev/sda
/dev/sda: ATA ST3250823AS 3.03
Read write error recovery mode page:
AWRE1 [ sav: 1]
ARRE1 [ sav: 1]
PER 0 [ sav: 0]
Caching (SBC) mode page:
WCE 1 [ sav: 1]
RCD 0 [ s
Well, it looks like I was able to answer my own question, apparently
hdparm doesn't do much in the way of SATA tunning because of the driver
the kernel now uses to run SATA is the SCSI driver.
Frank
Francisco Perez wrote:
Can anyone point me to an article or some tips on my I should be setting
Can anyone point me to an article or some tips on my I should be setting
in hdparm to tune my SATA setup to get some more thoroughput? I have 4
Seagate SATA drives plugged into an Escalade hardware Adapter running
RAID 10. Here's what I am currently getting from HDParm:
localhost ~ # hdparm