SNAFU

I've installed Fedora 10 Live CD to USB flash media.

Installed the i686 as well as the x86_64 version.

Installed on an nforce 430 platform and an SB600.

Installed to Kingston and Sandisk USB drives and to Sandisk SD card.

Every combination here is botched.

Decreasing max_sectors seems to alleviate the problem, but likely only
because the probability of some timing error is decreased in that way.

Changing autosuspend and level parameters (in
/sys/devices/pci.../*usb*/power/) also alleviates the problem, but
doesn't resolve it.

When starting up, the Kingston (USB drive) media has it's power level
set to "on". The EHCI host controller it's attached to however has it's
power level set to "auto".

I've changed all power levels to "on" (also for the OHCI controllers).
Although superfluous, I've set all 'autosuspend' values to -1. I've set
the flash media's max_sectors to as low as 32, but have also extensively
tried 128 and the default 240 (who came up with this value. Someone who
watched the new time tunnel pilot?).

Booting the USB media, then running something like 'yum update'
eventually generates an error akin to "unable to flush to dm-0" and then
the dreaded "I/O Error, lost page write".

FWIW, "badblocks -w [drive]" reports no errors.

SB600 (laptop) is running on AC power. (nforce is a desktop).

Just the error (and a reboot) would mean a bug.

The fact that the entire system is deterministically non-bootable (I
don't even want to attempt to salvage it) after these errors are reason
for me to qualify this as a serious bug.

David

-- 
ehci_hcd module causes I/O errors in USB 2.0 devices
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/88746
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