On Tue, Jan 3, 2012 at 5:53 PM, Swapnil Bhartiya <swapnil.bhartiya@gmail.com> wrote:
Here is the output:
https://docs.google.com/open?id=0B-ALfi5glBeCOTc0ODlkM2MtMzRhMS00ZTc0LTkwNmE...
Per that, they all have 512byte logical and physical sectors.
But I googled your EARS drive and see lots of complaints about performance.
One message says:
================= Recomendations:
If you have a new hdd wdc wd15ears and ability to copy data from old hdd to new one, it's better to set jumpers to enable advanced format and set up new system.
Using of utility wdalign takes a lot of time!
In my case with 1,5Tb hdd it takes more than 30 hours! ===================
Back to Greg talking:
advanced format is WD speak for 4KB sectors.
So my guess is that your EARS drive has 4KB sectors, but is lying about that fact to linux. It may be there is a jumper that will at least get it to tell the truth to hdparm. Solving that is your first step.
The trouble is you already have a filesystem with valid data on there. Getting hdparm to see the real physical sector size just means the NEXT time you partition the drive the partitions will be aligned with the physical sectors, but until then you are screwed.
FYI: there should be a jumper that sets the 4KB sector alignment between 1MB aligned and sector 63 aligned. DON'T change that jumper unless you are ready to re-partition and re-format. It has the effect of moving all of your data by a couple sectors. Which means your current filesystems will quit working.
If it were me, I'd get another new drive and replace the EARS one. If you want to get another EARS drive, then make sure you have the jumpers set right before you do any partitioning. Then move your filesystems from the old, likely misaligned drive, to the new, hopefully properly aligned, one.
Just checked the EARs one is not the one causing problem. It has two partitions and used as back-up for music and images.
The one which has OS on it is WDC WD1001FALS-00J7B0
Thanks Swapnil
I'm running out of ideas. I guess you could try smartctl (sudo /usr/sbin/smartctl -a /dev/sda), but the output is not easy to really understand. Looking at my current drive, I see lots of large numbers which would make me think it is on death's door, but the drive seems to be working fine. At my lab, I'd swap out that drive and see if the problem goes away. If so, I'd RMA the drive back for a new one. Sorry not to be more helpful, Greg -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org To contact the owner, e-mail: opensuse+owner@opensuse.org