On 12/16/2008 06:34 AM, Todd Denniston wrote:
Jonathan Gardner wrote, On 12/15/2008 09:52 PM:
I've got a system with two SATA connectors that I've hooked up two
SATA drives to. I upgraded by adding a PCI-E SATA card and another,
500GB SATA drive.
I've got Fedora 10 running with the root partition on an LVM volume
group on the big 500GB drive and my /home partition on an LVM VG on a
RAID1 array of the two original drives. Things go fine for about an
hour until the root partition begins to corrupt.
When I reboot, fsck reports that the root partition has a lot of
errors. Running fsck manually confirms that there are a lot of errors.
smartctl doesn't report anything obvious, but I don't have a lot of
experience with smartctl.
Does anyone have any suggestions on how to investigate this? I'm
rather amateurish with the admin tools to diagnose problems with
hardware.
Right now I've got my distribute setup on the two original drives
because I can't trust the new, large drive running on the SATA card.
which file system?
if ext[23] then read up on e2fsck with the following options:
e2fsck -k -c -c -f -y -C 0 -v /dev/device
Assumptions: 1) if ext3, the journal is internal. 2) bad blocks be the problem
even on a new drive (been there got the t-shirt_S_). 3) /dev/device is not
mounted at the time of execution.
This should force e2fsck to check for bad blocks while doing the file system
fixes.
Thanks for the pointers. I am running the e2fsck command now.
Someone may find the following useful. Note that the ext3 partition is
living on VolGroup01/LogVol02. VolGroup lives entirely on /dev/sdc2,
which is a massive partition on the 500GB drive connected over the SATA
PCI-E card. So the device I am using is:
# e2fsck -k -c -c -f -y -C 0 -v /dev/VolGroup01/LogVol02
e2fsck 1.41.3 (12-Oct-2008)
Checking for bad blocks (non-destructive read-write test)
Testing with random pattern: 9.07% done, 4:08 elapsed
The partition is about 20GB, and even though the drive can get some very
fast speeds, it is going to take about an hour to run through it. I'll
post the results here in case someone may find use of it.
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