> But if you plugged the new drive in the same slot as the old > one, you should be able to use it without extra steps. In the meantime, I figured out that the supposedly failed drive is OK. There seems to be something wrong with the SATA channel it was attached to:
[...] svwsata0 at pci1 dev 14 function 0 svwsata0: ServerWorks HT-1000 SATA Controller (rev. 0x00) : DMA svwsata0: using ioapic0 pin 11 (irq 11) for native-PCI interrupt svwsata0: primary channel wired to native-PCI mode atabus0 at svwsata0 channel 0 [...] svwsata0 port 0: device present, speed: 1.5Gb/s [...] wd0 at atabus0 drive 0: <ST3250310NS> wd0: quirks 2<FORCE_LBA48> wd0: drive supports 16-sector PIO transfers, LBA48 addressing wd0: 232 GB, 484521 cyl, 16 head, 63 sec, 512 bytes/sect x 488397168 sectors wd0: 32-bit data port wd0: drive supports PIO mode 4, DMA mode 2, Ultra-DMA mode 6 (Ultra/133) wd0(svwsata0:0:0): using PIO mode 4, Ultra-DMA mode 6 (Ultra/133) (using DMA) svwsata0 port 1: PHY offline [...] svwsata0:0:0: lost interrupt type: ata tc_bcount: 16384 tc_skip: 0 svwsata0:0:0: bus-master DMA error: missing interrupt, status=0x21 svwsata0:0:0: device timeout, c_bcount=16384, c_skip0 wd0a: device timeout writing fsbn 61002880 of 61002880-61002911 (wd0 bn 61002943; cn 60518 tn 12 sn 43), retrying svwsata0 channel 0: reset failed for drive 0 Also ``atactl /dev/atabus0 reset'' also resulted in ``reset failed''. How do I fix this short of re-booting the machine?