James B. Byrne wrote:
>
> On Thu, March 9, 2017 09:46, John Hodrien wrote:
>> On Thu, 9 Mar 2017, James B. Byrne wrote:
>>
>>> This indicated that a bad sector on the underlying disk system might
>>> be the source of the problem.  The guests were all shutdown, a
>>> /forcefsck file was created on the host system, and the host system
>>> remotely restarted.
>>
>> fsck's not good at finding disk errors, it finds filesystem errors.
>
> If not fsck then what?
>
fsck  run with -c, which forces badblocks to run. Or you can run that
directly.
>>
>> If it was a real disk issue, you'd expect matching errors in the host
>> logs.
>
> Yes, there are:
>
> Mar  9 09:14:13 vhost03 kernel: end_request: I/O error, dev sda,
> sector 1236929063
> Mar  9 09:14:30 vhost03 kernel: end_request: I/O error, dev sda,
> sector 1236929063
> Mar  9 09:14:48 vhost03 kernel: end_request: I/O error, dev sda,
> sector 1236929063

Looks like only one sector's bad. Running badblocks should, I think, mark
that sector as bad, so the system doesn't try to read or write there. I've
got a user whose workstation has had a bad sector running for over a year.
However, if it becomes two, or four, or 64 sectors, it's replacement time,
asap.
<snip>
        mark

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