I am probably overlooking something obvious here, but this is how it is:
In the last month, twice there were frame underflow incidents.
The first time, the RAID status was changing multiple times between Degraded and Healthy. The CPL was playing in the midst of the screening day and no other CPL showed issues.
I thought of deleting and reingesting the DCP at first, since CPL validation was nowhere to be found, but then, I went all the way to reinitialise the array.
There was nothing I could find to suggest which drive was the culprit. The CPL in question never created issues since.
The issue came up again, with another CPL that was playing for the first time.
My take on that is that it is probably a corrupt file due to a HDD that reached its retirement years.
There is always a chance, though, that the IMS1000 RAID controller is messing with written data when ingesting. I really hope not, because I doubt that there will be a proper replacement available.
So, until replacing the array with one of the WD or WD(Hitachi) drive models qualified for use, I was thinking of removing the one that caused the trouble.
The problem there is that, from what I gather (and please correct me if I am wrong), the IMS1000 is using a hardware RAID under the blanket of the software RAID that we are familiar with from SVx and DCP2y.
So, there is no indication of which drive did the mischief. My reading of kern.log.1 and odeticsd.log didn't bear any fruits.
The LEDs by the HDDs are all green and if I go to the storage tab of the diagnostic tool, I only get "normal" status for all rd00, rd01 and rd02 with the same SpinUpTime, and zero on ReallocatedSectorCount, SeekErrorRate,OfflineUncorectable and UDMACrCError.
Any ideas on how to discover the "lazy" one?
In the last month, twice there were frame underflow incidents.
The first time, the RAID status was changing multiple times between Degraded and Healthy. The CPL was playing in the midst of the screening day and no other CPL showed issues.
I thought of deleting and reingesting the DCP at first, since CPL validation was nowhere to be found, but then, I went all the way to reinitialise the array.
There was nothing I could find to suggest which drive was the culprit. The CPL in question never created issues since.
The issue came up again, with another CPL that was playing for the first time.
My take on that is that it is probably a corrupt file due to a HDD that reached its retirement years.
There is always a chance, though, that the IMS1000 RAID controller is messing with written data when ingesting. I really hope not, because I doubt that there will be a proper replacement available.
So, until replacing the array with one of the WD or WD(Hitachi) drive models qualified for use, I was thinking of removing the one that caused the trouble.
The problem there is that, from what I gather (and please correct me if I am wrong), the IMS1000 is using a hardware RAID under the blanket of the software RAID that we are familiar with from SVx and DCP2y.
So, there is no indication of which drive did the mischief. My reading of kern.log.1 and odeticsd.log didn't bear any fruits.
The LEDs by the HDDs are all green and if I go to the storage tab of the diagnostic tool, I only get "normal" status for all rd00, rd01 and rd02 with the same SpinUpTime, and zero on ReallocatedSectorCount, SeekErrorRate,OfflineUncorectable and UDMACrCError.
Any ideas on how to discover the "lazy" one?
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