2010/3/5 David Goodenough <david.goodeno...@btconnect.com>: > On Friday 05 March 2010, consul tores wrote: >> 2010/3/5 David Goodenough <david.goodeno...@btconnect.com>: >> > On Friday 05 March 2010, consul tores wrote: >> >> 2010/3/4 Mike Dresser <mdresse...@router.windsormachine.com>: >> >> > On Thu, 4 Mar 2010, David Goodenough wrote: >> >> >> hda: Host Protected Area detected. >> >> >> ^Icurrent capacity is 268435455 sectors (137438 MB) >> >> >> ^Inative capacity is 312581808 sectors (160041 MB) >> >> > >> >> > Is this a PATA drive, and from there, has a jumper on the back for >> >> > LBA48? >> >> > >> >> > Mike >> >> >> >> The problem does not look related with HD, it is more related to > the >> >> kernel. Anyway, You can use a specific tool which is provided by the >> >> HDs' company. >> > >> > Well the linux tool to do the job is supposed to be hdparm -N, but that >> > does not work because the correct option is not selected in the kernel >> > (CONFIG_IDE_TASK_IOCTL). >> > >> > David >> >> Yes, it is absolutely correct respect to kernel, but the second >> sentences is related to the HD (hardware). The first one reffers to >> the kernel. >> >> francisco >> > Are you saying there is a hardware tool provided by Samsung? > > Anyway, if you look at bug 572618 you will see the solution, it involves > two parameters for modules. > > David
Yes, it has been a norm for many brands, in fact, some tools work on many HDs, but i insist it does not look like a hardware problem, it looks clearly like kernel problem. If i were in this situation again, first thing to check, should be using the old kernel which worked well. after that, if i have the same problem, testing the HD with cfdisk, fdisk and sfdisk should be sufficient to discard a hardware problem; first, reading man pages, and DO NOT DOING any change, do not writing any thing. Also, there are Debian tools that work very efficiently as testdisk, smart-tools (i am not sure), and others to check HDs and recover data. francisco. "thanks for the information: bug # 572618. You should be able to make the kernel ignore the HPA thus: 1. Create a file under /etc/modprobe.d containing the lines: options ide_core nohpa=0.0 options libata ignore_hpa=1 2. Run 'update-initramfs -u -k 2.6.32-2-686' 3. Reboot Ben." -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-user-requ...@lists.debian.org with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact listmas...@lists.debian.org Archive: http://lists.debian.org/cdeec9051003050659l297ea2c2kd62138bd2a993...@mail.gmail.com