On 1/4/20 11:24 AM, William Park via talk wrote:
Looks like your HDD1 (Seagate 4TB) is failing, so can't mount /var,
/home, etc. But, the actual mounting order goes like
sda -- Adata 60GB
sdb -- WD 10TB (the new disk)
sdc -- Seagate 4TB
1. Try swapping the SATA connectors of 10TB and 4TB disks.
2. Replace 4TB as well.
-- William Park <[email protected]> On Sat, Jan 04, 2020 at
Evan,
You don't outline which HDDX is which. But as William points out, your
4TB Seagate drive is not behaving well. Sometimes these errors can be a
the result the sata port going bad, or a bad cable. But mostly it's the
drive failing. Is that the drive with your /var partition? Because if it
is, that is what's hanging your boot.
Jan 04 08:06:35 bluejay kernel: ata3.00: ATA-8: ST4000DM000-1F2168,
CC52, max UDMA/133
Jan 04 08:06:35 bluejay kernel: ata3.00: exception Emask 0x10 SAct
0x2000 SErr 0x4090000 action 0xe frozen
Jan 04 08:06:35 bluejay kernel: ata3.00: irq_stat 0x00400040, connection
status changed
Jan 04 08:06:35 bluejay kernel: ata3: SError: { PHYRdyChg 10B8B DevExch }
Jan 04 08:06:35 bluejay kernel: ata3.00: failed command: READ FPDMA QUEUED
Jan 04 08:06:35 bluejay kernel: ata3.00: cmd
60/00:68:00:b4:c0/01:00:d1:01:00/40 tag 13 ncq 131072 in
res
40/00:68:00:b4:c0/00:00:d1:01:00/40 Emask 0x10 (ATA bus error)
Jan 04 08:06:35 bluejay kernel: ata3.00: status: { DRDY }
Jan 04 08:06:35 bluejay kernel: ata3: hard resetting link
Jan 04 08:06:45 bluejay kernel: ata3: exception Emask 0x10 SAct 0x0 SErr
0x4090000 action 0xe frozen
Jan 04 08:06:45 bluejay kernel: ata3: irq_stat 0x00400040, connection
status changed
Jan 04 08:06:45 bluejay kernel: ata3: SError: { PHYRdyChg 10B8B DevExch }
Jan 04 08:06:45 bluejay kernel: ata3: hard resetting link
Jan 04 08:06:51 bluejay kernel: ata3: link is slow to respond, please be
patient (ready=0)
Jan 04 08:06:51 bluejay kernel: ata3: SATA link up 3.0 Gbps (SStatus 123
SControl 300)
Jan 04 08:06:51 bluejay kernel: ACPI Error: [DSSP] Namespace lookup
failure, AE_NOT_FOUND (20150930/psargs-359)
Jan 04 08:06:51 bluejay kernel: ACPI Error: Method parse/execution
failed [\_SB.PCI0.SAT0.SPT2._GTF] (Node ffff8802174d61e0), AE_NOT_FOUND
(20150930/psparse-542)
Jan 04 08:06:51 bluejay kernel: ACPI Error: [DSSP] Namespace lookup
failure, AE_NOT_FOUND (20150930/psargs-359)
Jan 04 08:06:51 bluejay kernel: ACPI Error: Method parse/execution
failed [\_SB.PCI0.SAT0.SPT2._GTF] (Node ffff8802174d61e0), AE_NOT_FOUND
(20150930/psparse-542)
Jan 04 08:06:51 bluejay kernel: ata3.00: configured for UDMA/133
Jan 04 08:06:51 bluejay kernel: ata3: EH complete
09:49:58AM -0500, Evan Leibovitch via talk wrote:
Hi again,
Sorry for two system problems over the holidays, but this last one truly
has me stumped.
Last week I had a problem trying to back up files onto a large drive using
a USB enclosure.
This week I've tried to complete the install, and of course it could not go
without problems....
The config is:
SDD with /boot and /
HDD1 with /var, /home and swap
HDD2 has one data partition
HDD3 has one data partition
I am trying to replace HDD2 with HDD3.
HDD3 installs and mounts just fine. But if I unplug HDD2, the machine
refuses to boot. Taking it to recovery mode eventually ends up in a
hardware freeze. Plugging it back in goes to a normal boot, even though the
HDD2's partition is no longer mounted to anything.
I've tried to eliminate the BIOS as a source of the problem, have updated
it to the latest version and ensured that the disk-to-be-removed is not
seen in any BIOS configurations.
I attach the one log file I am able to capture, since it freezes before
mounting /var.
As best as I can tell the freeze happens during the point of the bootup
where it's running fsck on the drives. It may be looking for the removed
HDD2 but I don't know where it's remembering to look for it. HDD2 is no
longer in /etc/fstab and I searched in vain for any instance of the UUID of
HDD2 in either /boot or /etc.
Any suggestions?
--
Scott Sullivan
---
Post to this mailing list [email protected]
Unsubscribe from this mailing list https://gtalug.org/mailman/listinfo/talk