Thank you, Tim,
you explained very good.
I use HD SATA/64 MB cache
WD 10EZEX
...so, the problem cannot depend by the setting the configuration.
Although this the error message :
------------
ATA2:00: link is slow to respond....
(and )
ATA200: SRST failed (erro 16)
------------
seem indicate that the HD is not recognized ...
I have to say that The computer boot regularly in Windows... But windows is
stored on other HD...
I think that I should check the HD healthy ? what tool I can use to do it in
safety mode?
> On Tue, May 5, 2015 at 1:21 PM, Tim <[email protected]> wrote:
> On Tue, 2015-05-05 at 10:25 +0300, Angelo Moreschini wrote:
> > the problem can depend by the physic set up of the HD (as "master",
> > "slave", "single drive", ...): this set up can be done by changing the
> > position of a jumper on the HD...
> >
> > I know that, in the past time, the HDs had to be set physically in
> > this way.., but recently I never heart anymore that the modern HD need
> > this operation..
>
> If it is a parallel (ribbon cable) type of connection, then master and
> slave configuring is essential. Sometimes that's done by setting
> jumpers on the drive, alternatively the drive can be jumpered so that
> the ribbon cable sets which is slave or master (the ribbon connectors
> are wired differently, with master on the end, slave in the middle, and
> the connector that is furthest away from the others goes into the
> motherboard.
>
> But if it's a serial (SATA) connection, only one drive can be connected
> to a host, so there is no master and slave arrangement. With older
> hardware, it's sometimes necessary to set a jumper which forces the
> drive to run in a slower mode, or forces it to pretend its a smaller
> drive than it really is.
>
> --
> tim@localhost ~]$ uname -rsvp
>
> Linux 3.19.5-100.fc20.i686 #1 SMP Mon Apr 20 20:28:39 UTC 2015 i686
>
> All mail to my mailbox is automatically deleted, there is no point trying
> to privately email me, I will only read messages posted to the public lists.
>
> George Orwell's '1984' was supposed to be a warning against tyranny, not
> a set of instructions for supposedly democratic governments.
>
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