William L. Maltby wrote: > On Thu, 2006-06-08 at 07:37 -0500, Johnny Hughes wrote: >> On Thu, 2006-06-08 at 07:58 -0400, Alfred von Campe wrote: >>> On Jun 2, 2006, at 6:57, Johnny Hughes wrote: >>> >>>> <snip> > > >> I would suggest the following: >> >> 1. Make sure you have the latest system BIOS available from the >> motherboard manufacturer. If you have a controller for the SATA drives >> that is not on the motherboard, make sure it has the latest BIOS offered >> by the manufacturer. >> >> 2. Make sure you have the latest bios for the hard drive(s) in question >> if there are bios updates provided from the hard drive manufacturer >> (that is the case with some SATA hard drives). >> >> 3. Look in the BIOS for settings that concern the drives (either in the >> motherboard or a separate controller) and ensure you understand what >> each one does and that they are set appropriately for Linux operations. >> >> 4. See if the controller manufacturer or the motherboard manufacturer >> provide Linux Drivers for the SATA controllers that might be newer than >> the ones in the Linux kernel. >> <snip sig stuff> > > If I may also suggest: > > 5. Check with the support orgs/sites of all component manufacturers > (possibly even the distributor you purchased from) to see if they have > knowledge of issues and resolutions. I've noticed over the years that > often a problem with a particular combination of hardware/software is > encountered/reported/solved between the end-customer and a support > organization earlier than elsewhere. Even if not, the *good* support > organizations will strive to help because they know that it is likely > that others will encounter the problem. This is not directly related but is the box stable in Windows? Hardware issues like the one below will show up in any OS. http://www.3ware.com/kb/article.aspx?id=10964 Another thing, the SATA controller does not happen to be a Silicon Image chip does it? I heard that the driver was supposed to be fixed but there were still some odd reports last I followed it. Them chips and certain hard drives don't like each other but I cannot remember which.