On Thu, 19 Jan 2006, PFC wrote: > This isn't really a md issue, but it's really annoying only when using > RAID, because it makes a normal process (kicking a dead drive out) so slow > it's almost non-functional. Is there a way to modify the timeout in question ? yeah i posted to l-k about similar problems a while back... i've got a disk which boots fine but fails all writes... useful for showing just how bad the system can become with a dead/dying disk. western digital is selling "raid edition" disks now -- and part of their marketing material discusses the long timeout which commodity disks implement <http://www.westerndigital.com/en/library/sata/2579-001098.pdf>. the raid edition disks give up earlier on the assumption the raid layer is going to take care of things. it's really too bad this isn't just a tunable parameter of the disk. even still -- the linux kernel could probably do something about this... drivers could have a blockdev(8) tunable timeout, and a mode where the driver just gives up entirely on the device at the first error/timeout and return EIO for all outstanding requests at that point... and the driver could remain in this state until an explicit request to re-attempt normal operations. -dean - To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-raid" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html