On Tue, 25 Dec 2007, Robert Moskowitz wrote: > Scott Ehrlich wrote: >> On Tue, 25 Dec 2007, Robert Moskowitz wrote: >> >>> Frank Cox wrote: >>>> On Tue, 25 Dec 2007 17:37:32 -0500 >>>> Robert Moskowitz <rgm at htt-consult.com> wrote: >>>> >>>> >>>>> Sense Key: 0x2 Not Ready, Segment 0 >>>>> >>>> >>>> Get some canned air and blow the dirt off of the sensor in the drive. >>> No change. >>> >>> The drive is the coffee mug tray style. so even opening the plastic >>> housing for the drive does not let me 'see' the sensor, but I used a lot >>> of canned air and no change in behaviour.... >>> >>> Perhaps I have to go out to the drug store and buy one of those drive lens >>> cleaner disks? >>> >> >> Have you tried removing/reseating the data cable on both ends? > USB. I thought I mentioned that.... > >> I've seen this work a handful of times. Also, SCSI or other? If SCSI, is it >> properly terminated, and with the correct ID? I once replaced a SCSI hard >> drive, and due to some technical change that completely baffled me, using >> the same cable, and ensuring IDs were all correct (unchanged), could not >> get the system to properly boot? In the end, a colleague with similar >> knowledge ended up relocating the SCSI terminator on the cable itself. No >> reason why it needed to be relocated, but that solved the problem. > Yeah if those SCSI terminators get a little dirty ;) >> Try cabling and see what happens... > > Using 2.0 cables. Of course the server is an old Compaq SFF that only > supports USB 1.1 What do the logs say about any possible USB errors? How about tail -f path_to_log_file and unplugged/replugging to see what the active messages are? Scott > > > _______________________________________________ > CentOS mailing list > CentOS at centos.org > http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos >