ср, 17 февр. 2021 г. в 13:58, gevisz <gev...@gmail.com>:
>
> ср, 17 февр. 2021 г. в 13:50, gevisz <gev...@gmail.com>:
> >
> > ср, 17 февр. 2021 г. в 04:54, Edward <edwardmgibso...@gmail.com>:
> > >
> > > On 2/15/21 9:53 AM, gevisz wrote:
> > > > Yesterday, my relatively new install of Gentoo failed to boot with the
> > > > following repeated messages:
> > > >
> > > > ata5.04: SATA link down (SStatus 0 SControl 0)
> > > > ata5.04: hard resetting link
> > > > ata5.04: failed to resume link (SStatus 0 Scontrol 0)
> > > >
> > > > My first thought was that something is wrong with my old IDE (ATA)
> > > > drive. (The Gentoo system partition was on /dev/sda5.)
> > >
> > > What motherboard model is this?
> >
> > It is a good question. My motherboard is Gigabyte Ultra Durable 
> > GA-MA790FXT-UD5P
> > and I had problems with it from the very beginning in the sense that it is
> > quite often doesn't see my SATA disks on the first boot (though, on the 
> > second
> > reboot it usually finds them). It is also quite often that it stops booting
> > the legacy operating system and automatically reboots before showing
> > a login screen.
> >
> > I bought it somewhere in 2006 together with a Gigabyte S-series 
> > GA-MA69GM-S2H
> > motherboard, which I have been intensively using every day since then and 
> > never
> > had any problem.
> >
> > In contrast, the Ultra Durable one has been used very rarely and for
> > quite short periods of time.
> > So, I do not expect it to wear off by now.
> >
> > > Probably BIOS disk controller setting needs to be set to either SATA AHCI 
> > > or something else?
> >
> > Well, I will look into but the problem is that it worked previously
> > with the same BIOS settings.
> >
> > Below is an account of what I have done so far.
> >
> > First of all, I copied the system partition from my ATA to the SATA
> > drive, updated the system,
> > recompiled @system, openrc and gentoo-kernel, which unfortunately had
> > no effect on the booting problem.
> >
> > At this stage, I started to seriously consider the suggestions above
> > that it may be a hardware problem.
> >
> > So, I returned to the initial ATA system partition, updated the system
> > there, switched off swap (in fstab),
> > reinstalled grub on this disk and tried to boot from it. To my great
> > surprise it failed to boot again
> > complaining about links to two my SATA drives that it was not supposed
> > to use at all!
>
> Correction:
> Of course, in this case, I have not reinstalled gentoo-kernel.
> So, it may be that the links to my SATA drives are still in
> the initramfs that was created before. (The swap was one of my
> SATA drives.)
>
> However, I used another SATA drive to try the system from there
> (with swap on it) with the same failure to boot.
>
> > And the legacy operating system has absolutely no problem starting
> > from the ATA drive now.
>
> P.S. Currently, I am going to remove my SATA disks from the system and
> try to reboot it once again. If it will not help, I am going to recompile
> gentoo-kernel on the only remaining ATA disk. (And, if that will not help,
> I will look for the hammer. :)

So, I have removed both my SATA disks and tried to reboot:
the system stalled without any error message at all.

After that I installed gentookernel and re-created initramfs image
(the previous one was created by the gentoo-kernel package before
the removal of the SATA disks).

After that, my Gentoo system successfully rebooted from the only
(ATA) disk that remained.

So, the problem is partially solved.

However, I still do not understand the exact reason for it to appear.

Most probably, both my SATA disks have connection problems as
Oli Schmidt suggested from the very beginning, and because they
both have it, it points to the motherboard that already had quite
a bad track record.

Unfortunately, I cannot diagnose it further, but later will try
to experiment with attaching my SATA drives again.

Also, I am going to test voltage outputs of my Enermax power
supply unit when I will have such a possibility. It is quite old but
was not used intensively. The other one, Thermaltake, is even older,
was intensively used everyday, and still had no problems. (Both
were bought with a big margin with respect to my computer's
power demand).

Thanks to all who replied to this thread.

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