oursondechine Posted September 11, 2023 Share Posted September 11, 2023 Hello, one of my disks just went disabled (DEVICE IS DISABLED, CONTENTS EMULATED). I looked at SMART diag and from my amateur eye I couldn't see anything; but I don't really know what to look for. So I'm asking for some wise people help. Also I'd like to understand better what is happening because my server looks like it's running fine. When UNRAID says content is emulated does that mean it build missing files (from the disabled disk) on the fly ? I don't understand how my VMs are running if I miss 1/3 of my filesystem. Here are some facts or things I tried that could help: The disabled disk is still hot (maybe a bit less than the others; not sure). I tried swapping sata and power cables with another disk, but the situation is the same with the same disk. Probably irrelevant, but my disks are all 99%full (60G over 8TB free on each) I'm attaching a SMART and instance diags that I ran just after a reboot. Thanks a lot for your time. unraid-diagnostics-20230911-1200.zip unraid-smart-20230911-1159(1).zip Quote Link to comment
Solution JorgeB Posted September 11, 2023 Solution Share Posted September 11, 2023 Disk has pending sectors and a failed SMART test, it should be replaced. 21 minutes ago, oursondechine said: When UNRAID says content is emulated does that mean it build missing files (from the disabled disk) on the fly ? Yes, it uses parity plus the other disks to emulated the missing disk's content. 1 Quote Link to comment
oursondechine Posted September 11, 2023 Author Share Posted September 11, 2023 That's bad news; but thanks for your time Quote Link to comment
oursondechine Posted September 11, 2023 Author Share Posted September 11, 2023 I have one more question; what about written data ? How can it not fail to write ? Is unraid smart enough to put everything on other Quote Link to comment
itimpi Posted September 11, 2023 Share Posted September 11, 2023 2 minutes ago, oursondechine said: I have one more question; what about written data ? How can it not fail to write ? Is unraid smart enough to put everything on other Not quite sure I understand your question? If you write to an 'emulated' disk then parity is updated appropriately so that Unraid can continue to emulate the disk correctly (including the new data just written). 1 Quote Link to comment
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