On Monday, April 29, 2013 22:13:45 Pierre Abbat wrote: > I think I've figured out what happened. I'll have to replace one of the > disks. > > ad0 is an IDE drive with a 60 GB disk; 53 GB is the root Hammer volume > (including /var, /tmp, /usr, and /home), and the rest is /boot, swap, and an > unused partition which used to be /crypt. 38 GB of the root volume is in > use. > > ad4 is a SATA drive with a 466 GB disk; 432 GB is the /crypt Hammer volume > (including /crypt, /olv, /backup, and /usr/obj), and the rest is /boot1, > swap, and an unused partition which I reserved for experiments. 48 GB of > the /crypt volume is in use. > > The missing inode errors appear in /var/spool/postfix. The new postfix > binary was dated April 26, so I tested the hypothesis that a bug in Postfix > was causing it by reverting to the previous version and rebooting the old > kernel. I still got errors. Once the computer crashed with a missing inode > error, but I couldn't find the file with the missing inode. I conclude that > that part of the disk is worn out.
What was ad4 is now ad6; the new disk is ad4. I copied everything from ad0 to ad4, except the root fs's history and /tmp and the boot sector. I edited /etc/fstab and /boot/loader.conf and rebooted into single-user mode. Everything looked fine. I exited single-user mode and got a stream of missing inode errors. Pierre -- gau do li'i co'e kei do
