(adding linux-ide) On Wed, 19 May 2010 23:34:08 +0200 Pierre Ossman <pierre@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > I'm mostly talking to myself at this point, but one thing that occurs > to me here is 4096 sectors line up decently with the numbers above. > 0x380 is just at the end of a 512 byte sector, and 0xf80 is just at the > end of a 4096 byte one. Not sure it's relevant, but then again I've > stayed blissfully unaware of how this sector size transformation is > going to happen. :) > Ignore the above. Math is hard. I did some more testing though, and this might be a low level issue. I did the following multiple times: # dd if=/dev/sde skip=4k bs=4M count=500 | md5sum And the results were: 13aa29adcd16f8d0faf3cb5c39f43826 d1e3df33c0b0d03c61f880a8f2bb6cfb 13aa29adcd16f8d0faf3cb5c39f43826 13aa29adcd16f8d0faf3cb5c39f43826 13aa29adcd16f8d0faf3cb5c39f43826 13aa29adcd16f8d0faf3cb5c39f43826 7a746328b60a63b76847c3e1319a8534 13aa29adcd16f8d0faf3cb5c39f43826 Note that this is a live system, so there is some chance that something wrote to than area, then restored it to the previous state. I'm not sure how likely that is. If not, then it would seem that this is a problem in either the disks, the controller or the controller driver. The components are WD WD1002FAEX, sil3132 and sata_sil24 respectively. Rgds -- -- Pierre Ossman WARNING: This correspondence is being monitored by FRA, a Swedish intelligence agency. Make sure your server uses encryption for SMTP traffic and consider using PGP for end-to-end encryption.
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