On 07/02/2014 11:40 AM, Andras Horvath wrote:
Good thinking would be, but as I mentioned before, I tested this issue on 
several hardware. With 2 new disks, new enclosures (3 kinds but same type), on 
different kind of servers and with different USB cables.

That does seem to cover it quite well; while it is a bit of a long shot it is possible all three enclosures used the same USB to SATA bridge. The odd part is that if it were intrinsic to the kernel or the USB stack of the OS one would think other people would have seen the problem (and thus why you asked the list if anyone else had seen the problem....:-)).

I think it must be the software causing this. Especially because the same 
hardware setup worked fine for long on Debian 6. That's why I turned to the SL 
mailing list.

And that's the correct course.

So disk is ok, cable end enclosure is ok, and server hw must be too I believe.
I would tend to agree. But there has to be something different here, otherwise I would think the list would be inundated with similar reports. I can't directly test SL 6 in this case, since I don't have an active SL 6 box at the moment, but my CentOS 6.5 laptop and a couple of CentOS 6 servers (Dell PowerEdge 1950) we have here do large USB data transfers frequently without seeing your issue. It is possible the SL kernel and USB stack have some differences to the CentOS kernel and USB stack, even being built from the same sources; I would not think that likely, and I would think that CentOS 6 in your circumstance should produce the same results.

In order to actually replicate the results we would need detailed information on the exact hardware that has been used that exhibits the problem (even down to the firmware rev of the WD hard disk), and then someone with that same hardware would need to replicate. It could be difficult.

But if you're satisfied with the SATA connection, just use it. I for one would like to find out what's actually going on, and help figure out how to actually fix it.

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