Wednesday at 09:26 AM3 days My system is currently running a parity check and I have just received a notification that my parity drive has read errors.2 things:This disk is only 3 weeks oldIt is a Seagate drive which always reports millions of raw read errors, even when first plugged inIs this likely just a quirk of the Seagate reporting confusing things? All of the "important" SMART attributes are still reporting 0I know I should probably run an extended smart test - but not until the parity check is finished.Or is that not actually necessary with Seagate's quirky reporting?Thanks
Wednesday at 09:55 AM3 days Most likely unrelated, where are the errors reported? Also check syslog for drive errors.Can be caused by a bad SATA connection and not the drive itself. Edited Wednesday at 09:55 AM3 days by Kilrah
Wednesday at 09:56 AM3 days You are likely to get more informed feedback if you attach your system's diagnostics zip file to your next post in this thread. It is always a good idea to do this to allow us to see the current state of your system and so we can see logs and configuration information.
Wednesday at 10:07 AM3 days Author Sorry, I knew I'd forgotten something - my brain is friedbob-diagnostics-20260701-1105.zip
Wednesday at 10:46 AM3 days It's logged as a disk error, but SMART looks OK. Recommend running another parity check or an extended SMART test.
Wednesday at 01:00 PM3 days Author Erm......help. The parity disk has now gone into error state and says disabledLatest diagnotics attached. I have absolutely no idea what to do now :-/bob-diagnostics-20260701-1357.zip
Wednesday at 01:28 PM3 days Author Presumably stop the parity check (which seems to be paused) first? That might be a stupid question but I don't want to do anything wrong!
Wednesday at 01:31 PM3 days Author OK, thanks. I presume let that run and post the results in about 16 hours.......unless it blows up sooner :-/
Thursday at 08:32 AM2 days Author SMART test claims to have passes, logs attachedbob-smart-20260701-1430.zipWhat do I do now?
Thursday at 09:05 AM2 days Swap both cables with a different disk, re-enable the disk, and see if there are any more errors:https://docs.unraid.net/unraid-os/using-unraid-to/manage-storage/array/replacing-disks-in-array/#re-enabling-a-disabled-disk-rebuilding-onto-itself
Thursday at 09:18 AM2 days Author at the risk of asking a stupid question............if it is a dodgy cable, and that is now attached to another disk, will that not mess up the parity build?
Thursday at 10:40 AM2 days 1 hour ago, Stannis33 said:at the risk of asking a stupid question............if it is a dodgy cable, and that is now attached to another disk, will that not mess up the parity build?At the moment the parity already appears it could be messed up so will need rebuilding (or at least checking) anyway. I think the key point at this stage is to identify if you have an identifiable external issue such as cabling or power since passing the extended SMART test normally mean the drive is healthy.
Thursday at 10:47 AM2 days Author I think the parity needs rebuilding to get it out of error state........what I do not understand is......if it tries to rebuild, and it can't complete because it now cannot read one of the other disks (because of the potentially wonky cable) and I end up with both a parity and data disk in error state am I screwed?Or can that mess be got out of as there is nothing wrong with my data disk or its contents (I hope!) - presumably by getting new cables and then trying again? Edited Thursday at 10:47 AM2 days by Stannis33 Typo
Thursday at 10:58 AM2 days 7 minutes ago, Stannis33 said:Or can that mess be got out of as there is nothing wrong with my data disk or its contents (I hope!) - presumably by getting new cables and then trying again?This would be the approach. Note that sometimes new cables are not needed - existing cables might just need seating more firmly. The other possible issue relates to power to the drives. Do you by any chance use power splitters with the drives - if so give some details.
Thursday at 11:19 AM2 days Author Erm this is where I run into a slight snag........ I did not build this machine myself, I don't really know what is plugged in, where or how. I am trying to figure it out but I am a long way from understanding! :-/it does appear to use power splitters though.
Thursday at 11:47 AM2 days 26 minutes ago, Stannis33 said:it does appear to use power splitters though.If using SATA->SATA splitters then no SATA connection from the PSU should be split more than 2 way. If using Molex->SATA you can normally get away with 4-way.
Join the conversation
You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.