* [gentoo-amd64] fsck seems to screw up my harddisk @ 2006-11-27 18:16 Guido Doornberg 2006-11-27 18:44 ` Richard Fish 0 siblings, 1 reply; 17+ messages in thread From: Guido Doornberg @ 2006-11-27 18:16 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-amd64 hello everybody =), About three months ago I decided to upgrade my desktop, in fact it was more like buying a complete new one because I only kept the case and the DVD-drive. Anyway, my PC now contains an Athlon X2 4200+, a Samsung SP2504 250 GB SATA2 harddisk and an Asus M2NPV-VM motherboard. As OS I chose Gentoo (obviously) 2006.0, and partitioned my hd as follow: /dev/sda1 ext2 /boot 32mb /dev/sda2 swap 512mb /dev/sda3 ext3 / everything left Took me much time to configure, but finally it was the way I wanted it, accept for the fact that I had to use the acpi=off and noapic parameters to get the kernel working. So the system worked perfect every time until fsck started checking my harddisk ("30 times mounted without being checked, check forced" In the beginning everything seemed alright but at 18.7% the checking freezed and a couple of minutes later fsck reported that my fs was corrupted and that it couldn't be fixed "try fsck manually etc...." So after this i did try fsck manually but everytime exact the same story... I tried to mount the fs with the livecd but got an "can't mount corrupted fs" (or something similar). I couldn't figure out why this happened because everything worked perfect and I hadn't done anything 'strange' with my pc. So, searched google and various forums but couldn't find a solution to fix my fs, so i formatted the complete disk and re-installed gentoo. Again, took me a lot of time, but after all the work it worked even better then the first time =).... well, at least until I had booted 30 times without checking the filesystem. Fsck again began 'doing his job', freezed at 18.7%, my filesystem was corrupted, couldn't mount it with my live-cd etc. This time I even had used my pc, just wanted to reboot, and at once my filesystem was corrupted :S, Well, I want to use Gentoo but i don't realy like the idea of spoiling my weekend by installing an OS thats gonna stop working 30 times booting later. So, does anyone know whats wrong here and how i can prevent that it happens again? thanks =) -- gentoo-amd64@gentoo.org mailing list ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 17+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-amd64] fsck seems to screw up my harddisk 2006-11-27 18:16 [gentoo-amd64] fsck seems to screw up my harddisk Guido Doornberg @ 2006-11-27 18:44 ` Richard Fish 2006-11-27 19:08 ` Alexander Gabert 2006-11-27 19:32 ` Guido Doornberg 0 siblings, 2 replies; 17+ messages in thread From: Richard Fish @ 2006-11-27 18:44 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-amd64 On 11/27/06, Guido Doornberg <guidodoornberg@gmail.com> wrote: > Well, I want to use Gentoo but i don't realy like the idea of spoiling > my weekend by installing an OS thats gonna stop working 30 times > booting later. I doubt this is really Gentoo-specific. > So, does anyone know whats wrong here and how i can prevent that it > happens again? What kernel are you using? Can you post your emerge --info? My initial guesses are one of: 1. You are using some experimental kernel that is corrupting the filesystem or 2. That your old power supply is not sufficient for your new components, and this is showing up as an occasional IO/DMA error on the hard disk. -Richard -- gentoo-amd64@gentoo.org mailing list ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 17+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-amd64] fsck seems to screw up my harddisk 2006-11-27 18:44 ` Richard Fish @ 2006-11-27 19:08 ` Alexander Gabert 2006-11-27 22:42 ` Richard Freeman 2006-11-27 19:32 ` Guido Doornberg 1 sibling, 1 reply; 17+ messages in thread From: Alexander Gabert @ 2006-11-27 19:08 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-amd64 Richard Fish wrote: > On 11/27/06, Guido Doornberg <guidodoornberg@gmail.com> wrote: >> Well, I want to use Gentoo but i don't realy like the idea of spoiling >> my weekend by installing an OS thats gonna stop working 30 times >> booting later. > > I doubt this is really Gentoo-specific. Me too, i don't think it's Gentoo making this break. > >> So, does anyone know whats wrong here and how i can prevent that it >> happens again? See below. > > What kernel are you using? Can you post your emerge --info? > > My initial guesses are one of: > > 1. You are using some experimental kernel that is corrupting the filesystem He said he was installing 2006.0 so i doubt he was going for ~arch and testing kernel. > > or > > 2. That your old power supply is not sufficient for your new > components, and this is showing up as an occasional IO/DMA error on > the hard disk. This could be the reason. 3. another reason: did you actually run a mke2fs with disk checking when creating the huge partition during installation? Could be your Samsung spinpoint is just broken somewhere at the 50GB region and the "simple and fast" mke2fs just creating the inode table is not noticing this for a weird reason. from man mke2fs: -c Check the device for bad blocks before creating the file system. If this option is specified twice, then a slower, read-write test is used instead of a fast read-only test. Please try this and report back if you found something. There is also low level test programs of disk vendors where you can stress test the brick to make sure it's not faulty. After all: sorry for the inconveniences you had, but this looks like a real bad hardware issue rather than a notoric software misbehaviour :) Good luck, Alex -- gentoo-amd64@gentoo.org mailing list ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 17+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-amd64] fsck seems to screw up my harddisk 2006-11-27 19:08 ` Alexander Gabert @ 2006-11-27 22:42 ` Richard Freeman 0 siblings, 0 replies; 17+ messages in thread From: Richard Freeman @ 2006-11-27 22:42 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-amd64 [-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 1022 bytes --] -----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hash: SHA1 Alexander Gabert wrote: > from man mke2fs: > > -c Check the device for bad blocks before creating the > file system. If this option is specified twice, > then a slower, read-write test is used instead of a fast > read-only test. > > Please try this and report back if you found something. > There is also low level test programs of disk vendors where you can > stress test the brick to make sure it's not faulty. > Uh, just keep in mind that if you do this you won't have much of a chance of recovering what used to be on the drive. I'm not sure that the FIRST thing I'd try doing is wiping the filesystem. There are other tools that can do a disk scan non-destructively (spinrite, etc). -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: GnuPG v1.4.5 (GNU/Linux) Comment: Using GnuPG with Mozilla - http://enigmail.mozdev.org iD8DBQFFa2m/G4/rWKZmVWkRAtYKAJ9qvMWhYEZu/SuDv8Q+N5Ilw8D37gCfes0Q IGHI9iGKtkNBTFzCcAVkldI= =FQqi -----END PGP SIGNATURE----- [-- Attachment #2: S/MIME Cryptographic Signature --] [-- Type: application/x-pkcs7-signature, Size: 3875 bytes --] ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 17+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-amd64] fsck seems to screw up my harddisk 2006-11-27 18:44 ` Richard Fish 2006-11-27 19:08 ` Alexander Gabert @ 2006-11-27 19:32 ` Guido Doornberg 2006-11-27 20:03 ` Bernhard Auzinger 2006-11-28 1:49 ` Richard Fish 1 sibling, 2 replies; 17+ messages in thread From: Guido Doornberg @ 2006-11-27 19:32 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-amd64 "> Well, I want to use Gentoo but i don't realy like the idea of spoiling > my weekend by installing an OS thats gonna stop working 30 times > booting later. I doubt this is really Gentoo-specific." - you're right on that, I love gentoo, but I hope you understand what I mean. 1. My kernel version is gentoo-2.6.17-r7 - so it isn't an experimental kernel I can't post my emerge-info now because I don't have everything needed for booting (monitor and stuff) 2. You really made me doubt about that, but I don't think that is the problem. I'll do some more research on that. 3. I'll look for that next weekend =) Thank you =) -- gentoo-amd64@gentoo.org mailing list ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 17+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-amd64] fsck seems to screw up my harddisk 2006-11-27 19:32 ` Guido Doornberg @ 2006-11-27 20:03 ` Bernhard Auzinger 2006-11-28 1:49 ` Richard Fish 1 sibling, 0 replies; 17+ messages in thread From: Bernhard Auzinger @ 2006-11-27 20:03 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-amd64 Am Montag 27 November 2006 20:32 schrieb Guido Doornberg: > "> Well, I want to use Gentoo but i don't realy like the idea of spoiling > > > my weekend by installing an OS thats gonna stop working 30 times > > booting later. > > I doubt this is really Gentoo-specific." > - you're right on that, I love gentoo, but I hope you understand what I > mean. > > 1. My kernel version is gentoo-2.6.17-r7 - so it isn't an experimental > kernel > > I can't post my emerge-info now because I don't have everything needed > for booting (monitor and stuff) > > 2. You really made me doubt about that, but I don't think that is the > problem. I'll do some more research on that. > > 3. I'll look for that next weekend =) > > Thank you =) Maybe you could try another filesystem. I don't think that your issues depend on the choosen filesystem. But trying another one may gives you further hints what is really going on. rgds Bernhard -- gentoo-amd64@gentoo.org mailing list ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 17+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-amd64] fsck seems to screw up my harddisk 2006-11-27 19:32 ` Guido Doornberg 2006-11-27 20:03 ` Bernhard Auzinger @ 2006-11-28 1:49 ` Richard Fish 2006-12-03 13:40 ` Guido Doornberg 2006-12-04 10:16 ` [gentoo-amd64] " Peter Humphrey 1 sibling, 2 replies; 17+ messages in thread From: Richard Fish @ 2006-11-28 1:49 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-amd64 On 11/27/06, Guido Doornberg <guidodoornberg@gmail.com> wrote: > 1. My kernel version is gentoo-2.6.17-r7 - so it isn't an experimental kernel Ok, just wanted to make sure. ;-) I've obviously been spending _way_ too much time browsing the gentoo forums, as I'm starting to suspect *everybody* is a "ricer". -Richard -- gentoo-amd64@gentoo.org mailing list ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 17+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-amd64] fsck seems to screw up my harddisk 2006-11-28 1:49 ` Richard Fish @ 2006-12-03 13:40 ` Guido Doornberg 2006-12-03 17:04 ` [gentoo-amd64] " Duncan 2006-12-04 10:16 ` [gentoo-amd64] " Peter Humphrey 1 sibling, 1 reply; 17+ messages in thread From: Guido Doornberg @ 2006-12-03 13:40 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-amd64 Hi again, Well, I downloaded and started a fresh 2006.1 livecd, repartitioned de hdd, started mke2fs and this time with the -c option. So, it started checking and after about 15 minutes this kept on showing up on my screen: ata1: error=ox40 {uncorrectable error} ata1: translated ATA stat/err 0X51/40 SCSI SK/ASC/ASCQ 0x3/11/04 after a while i got a couple of other messages, and now it keeps on talking about Buffer I/O error on device sda3, and after that various sectors and blocks are called. I did look after my power supply and I'm for 99% sure that's not the problem. So, correct me if i'm wrong but that would mean my harddisk is the problem? But how than is it possible that I can use it normally if I don't let fsck check it? I know this isn't really gentoo specific anymore, but if anyone knows what to do i'm happy to hear it. -- gentoo-amd64@gentoo.org mailing list ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 17+ messages in thread
* [gentoo-amd64] Re: fsck seems to screw up my harddisk 2006-12-03 13:40 ` Guido Doornberg @ 2006-12-03 17:04 ` Duncan 2006-12-03 17:54 ` Drake Donahue 0 siblings, 1 reply; 17+ messages in thread From: Duncan @ 2006-12-03 17:04 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-amd64 "Guido Doornberg" <guidodoornberg@gmail.com> posted eb2db630612030540k38b658b2q3571a712efc510d0@mail.gmail.com, excerpted below, on Sun, 03 Dec 2006 14:40:11 +0100: > Well, I downloaded and started a fresh 2006.1 livecd, repartitioned de > hdd, started mke2fs and this time with the -c option. > > So, it started checking and after about 15 minutes this kept on showing up > on my screen: > > ata1: error=ox40 {uncorrectable error} ata1: translated ATA stat/err > 0X51/40 SCSI SK/ASC/ASCQ 0x3/11/04 > > after a while i got a couple of other messages, and now it keeps on > talking about Buffer I/O error on device sda3, and after that various > sectors and blocks are called. > > I did look after my power supply and I'm for 99% sure that's not the > problem. So, correct me if i'm wrong but that would mean my harddisk is > the problem? But how than is it possible that I can use it normally if I > don't let fsck check it? > > I know this isn't really gentoo specific anymore, but if anyone knows what > to do i'm happy to hear it. Your suspiciouns seem correct to me as well. I've had several hard drives go partially bad over the last several years. The last one I know was due to heat as I'm in Phoenix, AZ, with highs in the summer approaching 50 C (122 F), and my AC went out. Since it followed the same basic pattern of another one previous to that, I expect the problem with the previous one was heat as well tho I'm not positive. What happens when the drives overheat is the platters expand and the heads crash into them, thereby digging grooves (which I could see taking the drive apart later) in the platters. Of course, the data will be destroyed at for those disk cylinders, basically wherever the head seeked to while the platter was hot enough to crash it, but the rest of the drive is recoverable, and from my experience, somewhat stable, provided the drive doesn't overheat again. Due to the way I have my system setup (see below) and what was damaged, I was actually able to continue to use the system for some time. Never-the-less, get anything you want saved off it ASAP, preferably leaving it shut off until you can, just in case, after which you can work around the problem if you wish, marking badblocks, and use the disk for either temp stuff only or always backed up stuff, from then on. It's possible for particularly drives used for mobile applications to have similar head-crashes, due to dropping the laptop or whatever, and there may be other ways to generate that pattern as well. How to work around the issue? First, as I said, backup the disk, or at least anything of value on it. Of course, this likely won't apply since you were setting up a new system on it anyway, but for completeness... If you run into areas that won't easily copy, and you want to recover the data if possible, there's a package, sys-apps/dd-rescue, or it should be available on any good recovery LiveCD. (I doubt it's on the Gentoo install CDs, but you can check). dd_rescue is the same idea as the normal Unix dd utility, but the rescue version is designed to try from the beginning of a partition forward until it runs into problems, then from the end backward, then in the middle of anything still left unread, until it has copied as much of the partition as possible. You can then fsck the recovered copy and see what can be repaired. Note, however, that this is a process that will take awhile, hours, possibly days, depending on how much of the disk is damaged, as the drive tries several times to read the data, and if it fails the software will have it try /again/ several times. Depending on your i/o system, you aren't likely to be able to do much else with the system while this is going on, as it'll tend to lock things up pretty badly during the try and fail and try again phase. Of course, this will be repeated for each bad block, so it WILL take awhile if more than a handful of blocks are damaged. Recovery of all the data is obviously not guaranteed in any case, and you may simply decide it's not worth the hassle. Google or see the dd_rescue manpage for details. It should be noted that dd_rescue can be configured to report the badblocks as it goes, so you can skip the badblocks mapping step below if you use it to recover existing data, and save its badblocks report to be reused later. If you skip data recovery attempts, or simply want to test any disk before you use it, you'll want another app, badblocks, likely installed already as a part of sys-fs/e2fsprogs. badblocks can scan the disk in either (non-destructive) read/read-over/compare mode, non-destructive read/write-back/read-back/compare mode, or destructive write-pattern/read-back/compare mode. Do NOT use the destructive mode if there's stuff on the partition you want to keep, as it WILL overwrite it. However you generate the badblocks report, using either the output of dd_rescue or badblocks, you then use this information when setting up your disk again. It's probably wise to setup multiple partitions, leaving the large bad areas unpartitioned. For smaller bad areas of just a handful of blocks, one of the parameters you can feed mkfs is a badblocks list. Again, check the manpages or google for the details, but when you are done, you should be left with a working and fsck-able set of partitions once again, since the badblocks are either excluded from the area you partitioned, or listed as badblocks in the superblock area of the filesystem you created using that parameter with your mkfs, and therefore avoided. --- * For reliability purposes, I had my system setup with multiple copies of most of my partitions. The idea was periodically, when the system seemed stable, I'd backup my main working copy of all the critical partitions, and could therefore boot a not-too-old backup copy in the event something broke on my main working copy. Basically, all it took (and all it continues to take) is appending a different root= parameter to the kernel command line, to boot the rootmirror. Thus, when portions of the drive were damaged, they were naturally the portions the head had tried to seek to during the time the drive was overheated, which means they were in the partitions mounted at the time. The unmounted partitions were therefore undamaged and after finding the system crashed due to the overheating, once I cooled things back down, I could boot to the backup partitions and resume from there. As it happened, only a couple of my working partitions were damaged, and I was able to use the working copy of all the other partitions. In terms of partitioning strategy... with my old system I made the mistake of separating /var and /usr onto their own partitions, and then trying to mix and match backup partitions with working copy partitions. That didn't work so well, because the portage records of what were installed were from the backup and therefore outdated /var partition, while /usr and root were the working copies, so portage had the wrong package versions as being installed. Since I had use FEATURES=buildpkg and had all the packages available in binary format, it was easy to simply reinstall everything from them, updating the portage database, but because it wasn't accurate, it couldn't unmerge the non-existing old versions, so I ended up with a bunch of stale and orphaned files strewn around. When I upgraded from that disk, which I did as soon as I could since I didn't trust it even tho it was working, I therefore setup things a bit differently. What I'd suggest today would be keeping /var and /usr on your root partition, but putting /var/log and /var/tmp and /usr/portage and /usr/src, as well as stuff such as /home, on on other partitions. (You can use one and either use mount --move or simply symlink, if you want to put several dirs from different places in the tree on the same partition.) Basically, anything that portage installs stuff to, along with its database in /var/db, should be kept on the same partition, so every backup of that partition will have the portage database in sync with what's actually installed, since it's the same partition. Here, my / partition and backup snapshots are 10 GB each. That's plenty of room to spare for me, since less than two GB are actually used. I'd recommend a total of three copies of it, the working or main copy, and two snapshot backups of the same exact partition size. The idea being that you can alternate backups, so even if something happens after you've erased the one backup in preparation for copying over the working system as a new snapshot, so that backup is erased or incomplete at the same time the working copy dies, you'll still have the other backup to fall back to. Similarly with partitions such as /home and /usr/local that hold data I want to be sure and keep. 2-3 copies of each, a working and 1-2 backup copies. /var/log you probably don't need a copy of. Same with wherever you have your portage tree, since you can always just sync it to get another if it's destroyed, and with /tmp and /var/tmp, since that's temp data anyway and doesn't need a redundant copy kept. Actually, while that can be implemented well on one or two disks, here, I got tired of hard drive problems, and I'm now running a four-disk kernel based SATA RAID, Seagate drives, 5-yr warrantee, altho they aren't quite as fast as some of the others you can buy. Booting requires RAID-1 so I have a small RAID-1 partition mirrored across all four drives. That's /boot. Most of my system is RAID-6, which in a four-way system is effectively a two-way stripe with two parity stripes as well. Thus, I can lose any two of the four drives and anything on the RAID-6 will still be recoverable. Stuff like /tmp, the portage tree, etc, that's either easily redownloaded off the net or is temporary anyway, is on a 4-way RAID-0 for speed. If any of the four drives goes down, all that data is lost, but that's fine, since it's either temporary or easily recovered anyway. Likewise, my swap is four-way striped. Disk read/write speed on this four-way striped area is incredibly fast (for hard drive access), since drives are so much slower than the bus connecting them to the system, meaning the system can keep the bus busy doing i/o to all four devices instead of just to one, and then having to wait for the slow drive. The problem with RAID-0, however, is that while it's far faster, it's also far riskier, since you lose it if you lose any of the component devices. Fortunately, the data that is easiest to replace is also generally the most speed critical, so it works out quite well. =8^) I have RAID-1 mirrored for /boot, RAID-6 for safety for most of my system, and RAID-0 for speed where I don't care if the data dies. On top of that, for the parts of the system I really care about, I keep several snapshots around on the RAID-6, thus protecting me both from fat-finger syndrome deletions (where RAID won't help, unfortunately) with the multiple snapshots, and from device failure with the RAID-6. As an added bonus, since I'm running kernel-RAID, it's not hardware specific, so if the SATA chip dies, all I have to do is buy a new 4-way SATA board, plug the existing drives into the new board, and compile a new kernel (from a liveCD or whatever) with the appropriate new SATA drivers, and I'm up and running again. If I had gone hardware RAID and it died, I'd have to get another one like it to plug into, if I wanted to recover my data, something I don't have to worry about with kernel-raid. =8^) -- Duncan - List replies preferred. No HTML msgs. "Every nonfree program has a lord, a master -- and if you use the program, he is your master." Richard Stallman -- gentoo-amd64@gentoo.org mailing list ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 17+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-amd64] Re: fsck seems to screw up my harddisk 2006-12-03 17:04 ` [gentoo-amd64] " Duncan @ 2006-12-03 17:54 ` Drake Donahue 0 siblings, 0 replies; 17+ messages in thread From: Drake Donahue @ 2006-12-03 17:54 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-amd64 ----- Original Message ----- From: "Duncan" <1i5t5.duncan@cox.net> To: <gentoo-amd64@lists.gentoo.org> Sent: Sunday, December 03, 2006 12:04 PM Subject: [gentoo-amd64] Re: fsck seems to screw up my harddisk > "Guido Doornberg" <guidodoornberg@gmail.com> posted > eb2db630612030540k38b658b2q3571a712efc510d0@mail.gmail.com, excerpted > below, on Sun, 03 Dec 2006 14:40:11 +0100: > >> Well, I downloaded and started a fresh 2006.1 livecd, repartitioned de >> hdd, started mke2fs and this time with the -c option. >> >> So, it started checking and after about 15 minutes this kept on showing >> up >> on my screen: >> >> ata1: error=ox40 {uncorrectable error} ata1: translated ATA stat/err >> 0X51/40 SCSI SK/ASC/ASCQ 0x3/11/04 >> >> after a while i got a couple of other messages, and now it keeps on >> talking about Buffer I/O error on device sda3, and after that various >> sectors and blocks are called. >> >> I did look after my power supply and I'm for 99% sure that's not the >> problem. So, correct me if i'm wrong but that would mean my harddisk is >> the problem? But how than is it possible that I can use it normally if I >> don't let fsck check it? >> >> I know this isn't really gentoo specific anymore, but if anyone knows >> what >> to do i'm happy to hear it. visit http://www.samsung.com/Products/HardDiskDrive/warranty/index.htm and get replacement current crop of spinpoint is getting bad reports for reliability -- gentoo-amd64@gentoo.org mailing list ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 17+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-amd64] fsck seems to screw up my harddisk 2006-11-28 1:49 ` Richard Fish 2006-12-03 13:40 ` Guido Doornberg @ 2006-12-04 10:16 ` Peter Humphrey 2006-12-04 11:31 ` Jesús Guerrero ` (2 more replies) 1 sibling, 3 replies; 17+ messages in thread From: Peter Humphrey @ 2006-12-04 10:16 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-amd64 On Tuesday 28 November 2006 01:49, Richard Fish wrote: > I'm starting to suspect everybody is a "ricer". Er, what's one of those? I assume it's an Americanism. -- Rgds Peter -- gentoo-amd64@gentoo.org mailing list ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 17+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-amd64] fsck seems to screw up my harddisk 2006-12-04 10:16 ` [gentoo-amd64] " Peter Humphrey @ 2006-12-04 11:31 ` Jesús Guerrero 2006-12-04 11:35 ` [gentoo-amd64] " Duncan 2006-12-05 3:53 ` [gentoo-amd64] " Boyd Stephen Smith Jr. 2 siblings, 0 replies; 17+ messages in thread From: Jesús Guerrero @ 2006-12-04 11:31 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-amd64 El Mon, 4 Dec 2006 10:16:58 +0000 Peter Humphrey <prh@gotadsl.co.uk> escribió: > On Tuesday 28 November 2006 01:49, Richard Fish wrote: > > > I'm starting to suspect everybody is a "ricer". > > Er, what's one of those? I assume it's an Americanism. > Nah, it is a word that people around use to use to name those persons that think that any hyper patched kernel is the best thing to make your computer like 10 times faster. Those use also to have an insane amount of custom cflags, ldflags and the like. Of course, for a ricer is also important to run ~arch for most packages, except for system packages and the toolchaing, where they usually prefer to use something like gcc-7.0_alpha1 releases (joking, of course). It somewhat a word play, with "racer", like if all these so-called "optimizations" made your box go at the speed of light :P You can find a funny thread about ricers and "ricing" in general in the gentoo forums: http://forums.gentoo.org/viewtopic-t-309752-highlight-ricer.html Jesús. -- gentoo-amd64@gentoo.org mailing list ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 17+ messages in thread
* [gentoo-amd64] Re: fsck seems to screw up my harddisk 2006-12-04 10:16 ` [gentoo-amd64] " Peter Humphrey 2006-12-04 11:31 ` Jesús Guerrero @ 2006-12-04 11:35 ` Duncan 2006-12-05 3:53 ` [gentoo-amd64] " Boyd Stephen Smith Jr. 2 siblings, 0 replies; 17+ messages in thread From: Duncan @ 2006-12-04 11:35 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-amd64 Peter Humphrey <prh@gotadsl.co.uk> posted 200612041016.58159.prh@gotadsl.co.uk, excerpted below, on Mon, 04 Dec 2006 10:16:58 +0000: > On Tuesday 28 November 2006 01:49, Richard Fish wrote: > >> I'm starting to suspect everybody is a "ricer". > > Er, what's one of those? I assume it's an Americanism. The term is borrowed from the automotive scene, where "ricer" refers to those that are into the performance scene -- particularly mods like racing decals, dual exhaust pipe ends, and the like, that are designed to /look/ impressive (to that set, anyway), but don't actually raise performance. Wictionary and Wikipedia both have entries in this context: http://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/Ricer Unfortunately, use in this context apparently hasn't made it into most dictionaries (at least those listed at onelook.com), as most only list the term in the sense of wiktionary definition 1 (a cooking utensil). http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ricer It's quite popular among users of binary distributions to mock Gentoo as a ricer distribution. One must admit such folks will be attracted to Gentoo, but of course as users, we know there are other reasons to use it as well -- including on the technical side the amount of possible customization, thus appealing to the power user who likes being in control, regardless of how interested in performance they may or may not be, and on the social side, a relatively large/active/helpful user community and rather more (quantity) and more useful documentation than is available for many/most distributions. -- Duncan - List replies preferred. No HTML msgs. "Every nonfree program has a lord, a master -- and if you use the program, he is your master." Richard Stallman -- gentoo-amd64@gentoo.org mailing list ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 17+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-amd64] fsck seems to screw up my harddisk 2006-12-04 10:16 ` [gentoo-amd64] " Peter Humphrey 2006-12-04 11:31 ` Jesús Guerrero 2006-12-04 11:35 ` [gentoo-amd64] " Duncan @ 2006-12-05 3:53 ` Boyd Stephen Smith Jr. 2007-01-12 15:38 ` Guido Doornberg 2 siblings, 1 reply; 17+ messages in thread From: Boyd Stephen Smith Jr. @ 2006-12-05 3:53 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-amd64 [-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 603 bytes --] On Monday 04 December 2006 04:16, Peter Humphrey <prh@gotadsl.co.uk> wrote about 'Re: [gentoo-amd64] fsck seems to screw up my harddisk': > On Tuesday 28 November 2006 01:49, Richard Fish wrote: > > I'm starting to suspect everybody is a "ricer". Gentoo *is* rice, optimized. ;) > Er, what's one of those? I assume it's an Americanism. http://funroll-loops.org/ -- "If there's one thing we've established over the years, it's that the vast majority of our users don't have the slightest clue what's best for them in terms of package stability." -- Gentoo Developer Ciaran McCreesh [-- Attachment #2: Type: application/pgp-signature, Size: 189 bytes --] ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 17+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-amd64] fsck seems to screw up my harddisk 2006-12-05 3:53 ` [gentoo-amd64] " Boyd Stephen Smith Jr. @ 2007-01-12 15:38 ` Guido Doornberg 2007-01-12 17:30 ` Adam James 0 siblings, 1 reply; 17+ messages in thread From: Guido Doornberg @ 2007-01-12 15:38 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-amd64 So, here I am again, now without the samsung drive, but this time (same system), with a software RAID-1, on 2 Western Digital Caviar Disks, working with ext2 on the boot-, and reiserfs on the rootpartition. Anyway, every time the system shuts down, the last things my pc tells me are: * Unmounting filesystems ... [ ok ] * Shutting down RAID devices (mdadm) ... md: md1 stopped. md: unbind<sdb1> md: export_rdev(sdb1) md: unbind<sda1> md: export_rdev(sda1) md: md2 stopped. md: unbind<sdb2> md: export_rdev(sdb2) md: unbind<sda2> md: export_rdev(sda2) md: md3 still in use. md: md3 still in use. md: md3 still in use. mdadm: stopped /dev/md1 mdadm: stopped /dev/md2 mdadm: fail to stop array /dev/md3: Device or resource busy [ !! ] * Remounting remaining filesystems readonly ... [ ok ] md: stopping all md devices. md: md3 still in use. Synchronizing SCSI cache for disk sdb: Synchronizing SCSI cache for disk sda: System halted. So, my question is quite simple i guess; Is it normal that my array (/dev/md3) doesn't like to be stopped? And if it isn't, how can I make it stop? btw, if you think I should post this kind of questions somewhere else, I'd be happy to hear so... thanks -- gentoo-amd64@gentoo.org mailing list ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 17+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-amd64] fsck seems to screw up my harddisk 2007-01-12 15:38 ` Guido Doornberg @ 2007-01-12 17:30 ` Adam James 2007-01-12 18:26 ` Guido Doornberg 0 siblings, 1 reply; 17+ messages in thread From: Adam James @ 2007-01-12 17:30 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-amd64 On Fri, 12 Jan 2007 16:38:21 +0100 "Guido Doornberg" <guidodoornberg@gmail.com> wrote: > So, my question is quite simple i guess; Is it normal that my array > (/dev/md3) doesn't like to be stopped? And if it isn't, how can I make > it stop? It would be helpful if you told us what filesystems you have mounted on '/dev/md3'. If it is your root partition, then it makes sense that it cannot be unmounted, as the programs and files used in the shutdown are located on it! This is not a problem however, as part of the shutdown process is to remount as read-only any filesystems that cannot be cleanly unmounted. > * Remounting remaining filesystems readonly ... [ ok ] This prevents any further writes to the disk, while still allowing processes access to their data. > Synchronizing SCSI cache for disk sdb: > Synchronizing SCSI cache for disk sda: Disk buffers are then synchronised to disk, removing any risk of data corruption, and the system is halted. > System halted. So in answer to your question, it is quite normal and is not a problem. If '/dev/md3' does not house your root partition, then it probably contains a daemon that is refusing to shutdown in an orderly manner. Running `lsof /partition` might help you track it down. -atj -- gentoo-amd64@gentoo.org mailing list ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 17+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-amd64] fsck seems to screw up my harddisk 2007-01-12 17:30 ` Adam James @ 2007-01-12 18:26 ` Guido Doornberg 0 siblings, 0 replies; 17+ messages in thread From: Guido Doornberg @ 2007-01-12 18:26 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-amd64 Great =), that's one problem less to worry about then... thank you =) -- gentoo-amd64@gentoo.org mailing list ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 17+ messages in thread
end of thread, other threads:[~2007-01-12 18:30 UTC | newest] Thread overview: 17+ messages (download: mbox.gz follow: Atom feed -- links below jump to the message on this page -- 2006-11-27 18:16 [gentoo-amd64] fsck seems to screw up my harddisk Guido Doornberg 2006-11-27 18:44 ` Richard Fish 2006-11-27 19:08 ` Alexander Gabert 2006-11-27 22:42 ` Richard Freeman 2006-11-27 19:32 ` Guido Doornberg 2006-11-27 20:03 ` Bernhard Auzinger 2006-11-28 1:49 ` Richard Fish 2006-12-03 13:40 ` Guido Doornberg 2006-12-03 17:04 ` [gentoo-amd64] " Duncan 2006-12-03 17:54 ` Drake Donahue 2006-12-04 10:16 ` [gentoo-amd64] " Peter Humphrey 2006-12-04 11:31 ` Jesús Guerrero 2006-12-04 11:35 ` [gentoo-amd64] " Duncan 2006-12-05 3:53 ` [gentoo-amd64] " Boyd Stephen Smith Jr. 2007-01-12 15:38 ` Guido Doornberg 2007-01-12 17:30 ` Adam James 2007-01-12 18:26 ` Guido Doornberg
This is a public inbox, see mirroring instructions for how to clone and mirror all data and code used for this inbox