Re: Serious problem with Linux on an old PC
- From: The Natural Philosopher <a@xxx>
- Date: Tue, 29 Aug 2006 12:20:05 +0100
Bernard wrote:
Hi there !
Could anyone give me a diagnosis on my hard disk problem ?
On an old Fujitsu, I had installed RedHat 6.0, a few years ago. It worked
for years
without any problem. Then, last june, I had a crash on a
partition, and I had to re-install, which I did only last week. At first,
everything seemed OK, but, after 2-3 days and about 3 ou 4 shutdown and
startup, I ran into a problem similar to that of last june, except that
it occured in /dev/hda5 instead of /dev/hdc3 last time :
'/dev/hda5 contains a filesystem with errors ! check forced...
... kernel panic, [file system] inconsistency... run fsck manually...'
at this point, I typed the root pasword as required, got dropped to a
shell, and typed:
'fsck /dev/hda5' :
'PASS 1 : Checking inodes, blocks and sizes... Duplicate blocks found
..... Invoking duplicate block passes... etc...
PASS 1B : Rescan for duplicate bad blocks... Duplicate bad blocks in
inode 55299 : 221452
55300 : 221453
55301 : 221454
... etc...
PASS 1C : Scan directories for inodes with dup blocks
..............
PASS 1D : Reconciling duplicate bad blocks
file ... (inode 55305, mod time Sat Aug26,2006 has 3 duplicate blocks
shared with 3 files.....
etc.., etc..,
/etc/mail...
Clone Duplicate bad blocks => Y
Pass 2 : checking directory structure : the '..' in /etc/mail (55299) is
missing... FIX => Y
PASS 4 : checking reference counts: inode 2 reference count is 15, should
be 16 FIX => Y, inode 18433 reference count is 27, should be 26 FIX =>
Y... etc... unattached inode 55301
etc...
PASS 5 : checking group summary information. Block bitmap differences
+221461 +221462 .... 221486... etc...
etc... etc... it took at least 15 minutes to fix everything, replying 'Y'
to every ask. Then I got :
'/dev/hda5 : filesystem was modified. /dev/hda5 6703/110592 files (0.4%
non contiguous.
on reboot, I had:
/dev/hda5 clean
/dev/hdc2 clean
/dev/hdc3 clean
After so many fixings, I rather expected that it would not reboot
properly, but, so far, I have not found anything wrong in the repaired
system.
Last june, about the same thing had happened, not on /dev/hda5, but on
/dev/hdc3. There were so much fixing to be done, that I had given up. This
time, it happens on a newly re-installed system.
I suppose that a similar problem is going to happen again some time
sooner or later...
Thanks in advance for any useful input
Essentially it looks like the disk is falling apart.
Get a new disk, and reinstall on that.
Unless its just a system you don't mind losing data on.
Bad block mapping works up to a point, but an increase in the bad block count shows that something bad is happening inside the disk.
.
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