Adam PAPAI writes:
> Greg Oster wrote:
> > Adam PAPAI writes:
> > 
> >>After reboot my dmesg end:
> >>
> >>rootdev=0x400 rrootdev=0xd00 rawdev=0xd02
> >>Hosed component: /dev/sd0d.
> >>raid0: Ignoring /dev/sd0d.
> >>raid0: Component /dev/sd1d being configured at row: 0 col: 1
> >>          Row: 0 Column: 1 Num Rows: 1 Num Columns: 2
> >>          Version: 2 Serial Number: 100 Mod Counter: 27
> >>          Clean: No Status: 0
> >>/dev/sd1d is not clean !
> >>raid0 (root)raid0: no disk label
> >>raid0: Error re-writing parity!
> >>
> >>dd if=/dev/rsd0d of=/dev/null bs=10m &
> >>dd if=/dev/rsd1d of=/dev/null bs=10m &
> >>
> >>was successfully ended.
> >>
> >># raidctl -iv raid0 
> > 
> > 
> > wha does 'raidctl -s raid0' say?  It probably says that 'sd0d' is 
> > failed.  You can't initialize parity with 'raidctl -iv' on a set with 
> > a failed component.  You can do 'raidctl -vR /dev/sd1d raid0' to get 
> > it to reconstruct back onto the failed component.  After that you can 
> > do a 'raidctl -iv' (though by that point it's strictly not necessary).
> 
> Interesting. I tried with 3 full reinstall and all raidctl -iv raid0 
> fails, but with raidctl -vR /dev/sd0d solved the problem.
> 
> But why?

It didn't solve the "Media Error"... the "Media Error" just didn't 
show up again.

> Will it be good from now? 

If I had to pick from one of "Yes" or "No", I'd pick "No".

> I'm fraid the raid will collapse again. I hope not.
> 
> I going to continue the setup on my server. Thanks anyway. I hope I 
> won't get more errors...

I hope so too... but nothing in 'raidctl -vR' really fixes media 
errors...  (Since 'raidctl -R' is going to write to sd0, it's possible 
that the drive has now re-mapped whatever bad block was on sd0, and 
sd0 may work fine now... but it's unusual to see the same error on 
2 different drives... makes me maybe suspect cabling too..)

Later...

Greg Oster

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