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Seagate seatools lba limit11/5/2023 Num Test Status segment LifeTime LBA_first_err Description number (hours) Total Correction Gigabytes Total ECC rereads/ errors algorithm processed uncorrected fast | delayed rewrites corrected invocations errors read: 698782310 0 0 698782310 0 2862.566 0 write: 0 0 0 0 0 1018.015 0 Number of minutes until next internal SMART test = 52 Vendor (Seagate/Hitachi) factory information Number of read and write commands whose size segment size = 105996 Specified load-unload count over device lifetime: 600000īlocks received from initiator = 1984414192īlocks read from cache and sent to initiator = 626758881 Specified cycle count over device lifetime: 50000 SMART support is: Available - device has SMART capability. Smartctl -a: smartctl 6.6 r4594 (local build)Ĭopyright (C) 2002-17, Bruce Allen, Christian Franke, = START OF INFORMATION SECTION = r/HomeNetworking - Simpler networking advice. r/pfsense - for all things pfsense ('nix firewall) Might be able to find things useful for a lab. r/hardwareswap - Used hardware, swap hardware. r/buildapcsales - For sales on building a PC r/linux - All flavors of Linux discussion & news - not for the faint of heart! Try to be specific with your questions if possible. r/linux4noobs - Newbie friendly place to learn Linux! All experience levels. r/datacenter - Talk of anything to do with the datacenter here We have an official, partnered Discord server which is great for all kinds of discussions and questions, invite link is clickable button at the top of the sidebar or right here.Keep piracy discussion off of this subreddit.Īll sales posts and online offers should be posted in /r/homelabsales.īefore posting please read the wiki, there is always content being added and it could save you a lot of time and hassle.įeel like helping out your fellow labber? Contribute to the wiki! It's a great help for everybody, just remember to keep the formatting please. Report any posts that you feel should be brought to our attention. We love detailed homelab builds, especially network diagrams! Post about your homelab, discussion of your homelab, questions you may have, or general discussion about transition your skill from the homelab to the workplace. Please see the full rules page for details on the rules, but the jist of it is: Labporn Diagrams Tutorials News Subreddit Rules Fun times.New to Homelab? Start Here! Homelab Wiki HomelabSales If you did it wrong you could create a single partition larger than 8GB which would appear to boot properly, but as the drive filled up over time, system updates would eventually place the updated OS files beyond the 8GB mark and then the BIOS couldn't load them anymore, so when you rebooted the system wouldn't come back up. Once the kernel was running it could see the whole disk. I remember installing Linux back in the 90s and you had to make sure the boot partition was within the first 8GB of the drive so that the BIOS could boot it. The rest of the disk will become accessible once the OS loads, if it's an OS like Windows that supports LBA. When you set the drive to Auto in the BIOS, did you also set it to LBA? IIRC early Award BIOSes let you change between LBA and CHS ("Large") even when the drive was set to auto.īy the looks of it, the BIOS will only see the first 8GB so as long as you install your OS in this part of the drive then it will be fine. This in effect means that the `geometry' is obsolete, and the total disk size can no longer be computed from the geometry, but is found in the LBA capacity field returned by the IDENTIFY command. Hard drives over 8.4 GB are supposed to report their geometry as 13.
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