hard drive problems
Zane C. B.
zanecb at midwest-connections.com
Tue Feb 7 15:13:58 UTC 2006
On Mon, 06 Feb 2006 21:57:29 -0500
Gene Heskett <gene.heskett at verizon.net> wrote:
> On Monday 06 February 2006 21:30, zanecb at midwest-connections.com
wrote:
> >> Zane C. B. wrote:
> >>> hdb: lost interrupt
> >>> hda: status error: status=0x58 { DriveReady SeekComplete
> >>> DataRequest } ide: failed opcode was: unknown
> >>> hda: drive not ready for command
> >>> hda: irq timeout: status=0xd0 { Busy }
> >>> ide: failed opcode was: unknown
> >>> ide0: reset: success
> >>>
> >>> Any ideas what is happening or suggestions for testing for what is
> >>> happening?
> >>>
> >>> smartctl -H /dev/hda and smartctl -l error /dev/hda show the drive
> >>> as being good.
> >>
> >> Download and run the manufacturer's diagnostics tools (full barrage
> >> of tests) to eliminate hard drive faults first. Then we can see
> >> whether we're looking at a controller issue?
> >
> >Actually trying to advoid this so I don't have to take the machine
out
> > of production.
>
> If its indeed that important, then DO IT NOW while you still have data
> that can be recovered when it does curl up its toes. If the data is
> valuable, then production must understand that their baby needs a
fresh
> diaper. If they can't do that, then I assume you can get an overtime
> approval to check it after hours? But by then, it may well be too
> late. IBM published some papers a few years ago about how they were
> attempting to arrive at some sort of a meaningfull indicator of
> impending drive failure, but their best work at the time could give
> only a 20 minute warning, this in the heyday of deathstars. Apply
> Moores Law, and it might be 8 hours today. Emphasis on the might...
>
> I trust that you do have backups? Don't you?
Not worried about it going down because of that.
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