Hi list, Here is the snippit from my dmesg: thdb: media error (bad sector): status=0x51 { DriveReady SeekComplete Error } hdb: media error (bad sector): error=0x34 { AbortedCommand LastFailedSense=0x03 } ide: failed opcode was: unknown end_request: I/O error, dev hdb, sector 1173936 Buffer I/O error on device hdb, logical block 293484 hdb: media error (bad sector): status=0x51 { DriveReady SeekComplete Error } hdb: media error (bad sector): error=0x34 { AbortedCommand LastFailedSense=0x03 } ide: failed opcode was: unknown end_request: I/O error, dev hdb, sector 1173940 Buffer I/O error on device hdb, logical block 293485 hdb: media error (bad sector): status=0x51 { DriveReady SeekComplete Error } hdb: media error (bad sector): error=0x34 { AbortedCommand LastFailedSense=0x03 } ide: failed opcode was: unknown end_request: I/O error, dev hdb, sector 1173944 Buffer I/O error on device hdb, logical block 293486 hdb: media error (bad sector): status=0x51 { DriveReady SeekComplete Error } hdb: media error (bad sector): error= I wonder if that is something to do with LVM? When CD in CDROM drive, it boots just fine. I have uncommented the line in /etc/lvm/lvm.conf Just in case, here is my lvm.conf file: # This is an example configuration file for the LVM2 system. # It contains the default settings that would be used if there was no # /etc/lvm/lvm.conf file. # # Refer to 'man lvm.conf' for further information including the file layout. # # To put this file in a different directory and override /etc/lvm set # the environment variable LVM_SYSTEM_DIR before running the tools. # This section allows you to configure which block devices should # be used by the LVM system. devices { # Where do you want your volume groups to appear ? dir = "/dev" # An array of directories that contain the device nodes you wish # to use with LVM2. scan = [ "/dev" ] # A filter that tells LVM2 to only use a restricted set of devices. # The filter consists of an array of regular expressions. These # expressions can be delimited by a character of your choice, and # prefixed with either an 'a' (for accept) or 'r' (for reject). # The first expression found to match a device name determines if # the device will be accepted or rejected (ignored). Devices that # don't match any patterns are accepted. # Be careful if there there are symbolic links or multiple filesystem # entries for the same device as each name is checked separately against # the list of patterns. The effect is that if any name matches any 'a' # pattern, the device is accepted; otherwise if any name matches any 'r' # pattern it is rejected; otherwise it is accepted. # An array of directories that contain the device nodes you wish # to use with LVM2. scan = [ "/dev" ] # A filter that tells LVM2 to only use a restricted set of devices. # The filter consists of an array of regular expressions. These # expressions can be delimited by a character of your choice, and # prefixed with either an 'a' (for accept) or 'r' (for reject). # The first expression found to match a device name determines if # the device will be accepted or rejected (ignored). Devices that # don't match any patterns are accepted. # Be careful if there there are symbolic links or multiple filesystem # entries for the same device as each name is checked separately against # the list of patterns. The effect is that if any name matches any 'a' # pattern, the device is accepted; otherwise if any name matches any 'r' # pattern it is rejected; otherwise it is accepted. # Remember to run vgscan after you change this parameter to ensure # that the cache file gets regenerated (see below). # By default we accept every block device: filter = [ "a/.*/" ] # Exclude the cdrom drive filter = [ "r|/dev/cdrom|" ] # When testing I like to work with just loopback devices: # filter = [ "a/loop/", "r/.*/" ] # Or maybe all loops and ide drives except hdc: # filter =[ "a|loop|", "r|/dev/hdc|", "a|/dev/ide|", "r|.*|" ] # Use anchors if you want to be really specific # The results of the filtering are cached on disk to avoid # rescanning dud devices (which can take a very long time). By # default this cache file is hidden in the /etc/lvm directory. # It is safe to delete this file: the tools regenerate it. cache = "/etc/lvm/.cache" # You can turn off writing this cache file by setting this to 0. write_cache_state = 1 # Advanced settings. # List of pairs of additional acceptable block device types found # in /proc/devices with maximum (non-zero) number of partitions. # types = [ "fd", 16 ] # If sysfs is mounted (2.6 kernels) restrict device scanning to # the block devices it believes are valid. # 1 enables; 0 disables. sysfs_scan = 1 # By default, LVM2 will ignore devices used as components of # software RAID (md) devices by looking for md superblocks. # 1 enables; 0 disables. md_component_detection = 1 } # This section that allows you to configure the nature of the # information that LVM2 reports. log { # Controls the messages sent to stdout or stderr. # There are three levels of verbosity, 3 being the most verbose. Any ideas? Thanks in advance. Dmitry.
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