gene heskett composed on 2024-01-15 08:39 (UTC-0500):

>    └─md2       9:2    0     3G  0 raid10
> sdh           8:112  0   1.9T  0 disk
> └─sdh1        8:113  0   1.9T  0 part  <<<
> sdi           8:128  0   1.9T  0 disk
> └─sdi1        8:129  0   1.9T  0 part  <<<
> sdj           8:144  0   1.9T  0 disk
> └─sdj1        8:145  0   1.9T  0 part  <<<
> sdk           8:160  0   1.9T  0 disk
> └─sdk1        8:161  0   1.9T  0 part  <<<
> sdl           8:176  0   1.9T  0 disk
> └─sdl1        8:177  0   1.9T  0 part  <<<
> sr0          11:0    1  1024M  0 rom

Is there a smart card reader in coyote? They can cause what looks like phantom
drives. If not, I have no idea what those 5 <<< devices might be assigned to,
other than their sizes. :( I suspect it could be some kind of bug, possibly in
SATA expansion card firmware. There was a buggy Bookworm kernel recently causing
I/O problems. What kernel are you running? 6.1.0-17 is current. Bug was sometime
after 6.1.0-13.

I have a card reader that produces sd[cdef]:
# lsscsi
[2:0:0:0]    disk    ATA      ST1000NM0011     SN02  /dev/sda
[3:0:0:0]    disk    ATA      ST1000DM003-1CH1 CC49  /dev/sdb
[4:0:0:0]    cd/dvd  ASUS     DRW-24B1ST   j   1.11  /dev/sr0
[6:0:0:0]    disk    Generic  USB SD Reader    1.00  /dev/sdc
[6:0:0:1]    disk    Generic  USB CF Reader    1.01  /dev/sdd
[6:0:0:2]    disk    Generic  USB SM Reader    1.02  /dev/sde
[6:0:0:3]    disk    Generic  USB MS Reader    1.03  /dev/sdf
#
So, when I insert a generic USB stick, it gets /dev/sdg. :p
-- 
Evolution as taught in public schools is, like religion,
        based on faith, not based on science.

 Team OS/2 ** Reg. Linux User #211409 ** a11y rocks!

Felix Miata

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