On 9 October 2011 00:29, Steven D'Aprano steve@pearwood.info wrote:
Timothy Pearson wrote:
On Saturday 08 October 2011 19:41:56 Mag. Dr. Nikolaus Klepp wrote:
Well, looks like the harddrive. Get a drive now, your's could fail any second.
I have one on order!
Lisi
In my experience if the drive is going to die completely it will do so without much warning. The bad sectors you are experiencing are more like a cancer (dying R/W heads, bad disk surface, one or more head crashes in the past, etc.) and will continue to spread. The less you use the disk the better, as each write access will likely corrupt more sectors.
You said you ran smartctrl which found "some errors", but you didn't say how many or how serious. Most hard drives will be expected to develop bad blocks over time: they're normally found by the drive and mapped away to never be used again.
Have you done an fsck on the file system?
I always install two hard drives in desktops and use software RAID-1 for redundancy in case of a failed drive. RAID is not just for servers :)
Well, I installed a new drive (twice the size of the old one, but small by today's standarsd at 160GB. I then tried to install an OS.
After trying 4 times with Lenny and having it fail each time, and having major problems with the partitioner, I decided that Lenny as Old Stable might be OK ot use, but apparently not to install. So I tried Squeeze. Apart from a small glitch over network card drivers which didn't cause any real problems, I was presented with a system that the installer reckoned just needed to reboot.
Since when I have had major problems. X is a mess. The log-in screen flashes, flickers and is useless anyway because the mouse and keyboard are dead. I had uswed LXDE for teh instalation, so nI relogged in at teh CLI and installed Trinity, hoping that kdm would be better than gdm. It was. It flickered less than gdm. But it still didn't allow me to do anything.
Attempts to install an xorg.conf that I know works with that monitor and video card nall failed for different reasons. When I log in at the CLI I get SOSs from the kernel about missing mod files.
There is obviously more than just the HDD wrong with this machine, and I still fear the motherboard. So next I will try the CMOS battery, and if that doesn't work I shall have to decide what to about/with that desktop.
I feel that at this stage I am clutching at straws. Ideas still welcomed! I haven't yet reached the stage where I am quite ready to pension the old girl off.
Lisi