Dear Debian-Users! I have started this as a bug report (Bug#426432) but I think that it actually deserves a broader discussion. To begin by stating the problem: I am using Debian/stable with a 2.6.18-kernel (self-made) and the offical 2.6.18-4-686-kernel-image (i.e. you may assume that all relevant packages are up-to-date versions of this branch). During booting I get randomly error messages concerning the loading of modules, i.e. sometimes they are loaded without any error messages, sometimes not. In my opinion, this corresponds in some way to Bug#333522 (udev: modules randomly aren't loaded at startup). In addition to that, hdparm complains about setting dma on my disk (i.e. I get error messages of the kind "hda: status error: status=0x58 { DriveReady SeekComplete DataRequest }"). To discuss things in more detail, let me start with the latter. Evidently, this might have a lot of reasons which are related to a faulty hardware. But up to now, I have checked my disk with smartctl, and I have changed the IDE cable as well as the kernel -with no effect. Though this leaves the possibility of a damaged IDE controller, I think that it has to do with the booting process. After all, I am able to set the same parameters (after booting) without any problems. It is also interesting to note that these problems just right occurred after I had to repair some disk problems (bad blocks, etc.) (successfully), which affected my old kernel (and modules of it respectively). The second problem (random problems concerning the loading of modules) has been from the very beginning of my Etch-installation. But they have gotten enhanced since the already-mentioned disk repair, i.e. they show up more often. Affected modules are ide_cd, uhci_hcd, usbcore, usb_storage, 8139too, lp (if I would try to related it to my disk repair, then it is probably more interesting where those modules actually reside on the disk). Worthwile to mention is that those errors do not occur if booting the offical kernel-image. The problem is not solved by installing or compiling a new kernel. So much for this. Hopefully things might get clearer by looking at the relevant logs. For this reason, I have provided this link [1], which is unfortunately limited to 100 downloads & 7 days (you may distribute the file as needed). Boot and boot.0 show the results of booting the SAME kernel (one time with errors and one time with no errors). kern.log and syslog contain the relevant entries from these processes. In this spirit With thanks for your efforts Yours Gernot --- [1] http://download.yousendit.com/6ABD24B71044D3EC http://download.yousendit.com/C81C745658EEC5C7 (mirror)
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