paulr@umbc5.umbc.edu (Paul Riddle) (02/10/91)
Hi everyone, I've got a MicroVAX II here that was donated to our department. It has three RD53 disks, one of which seems to be sick. Currently I'm running Ultrix 3.0 on it (haven't gotten around to upgrading) and every so often I get a "disk transfer error" logged to my syserr file. I ran through it with the radisk utility and got a bunch of force error modifiers set, and now it refuses to fsck, complaining that it can't read these blocks. I got around this earlier by newfs'ing the disk, but the problem has returned. Normally in this case we would just have field service come out and replace the drive; however, this machine isn't covered by our service contract, so I would like to see if I can salvage the disk. Is there any way I can do a low level format on an RD53 so it can find its bad blocks? This would seem like the best solution. If it's not possible, is there anything else I can do, or should I forget it? Paul Riddle | paulr@umbc3.umbc.edu Systems Programmer / Administrator | ...!{uunet,haven}!umbc3!paulr UMBC, Computer Science Department | Baltimore, MD 21228 | (301) 455-3962
paulr@umbc4.umbc.edu (Paul Riddle) (02/12/91)
In article <4983@umbc3.UMBC.EDU> paulr@umbc5.umbc.edu (Paul Riddle) writes: > >Hi everyone, > >I've got a MicroVAX II here that was donated to our department. It >has three RD53 disks, one of which seems to be sick. Currently I'm etc... Thanks to everyone who responded to my previous posting. I decided that for the time being, the easiest thing to do would be to try a low level format on the drive (the machine isn't in great demand)... Anyhow, I was able to locate the appropriate diagnostic tape floating around campus, so I reformatted the drive and the errors haven't returned yet. I'm keeping my fingers crossed. Thanks again, Paul Riddle | paulr@umbc3.umbc.edu Systems Programmer / Administrator | ...!{uunet,haven}!umbc3!paulr UMBC, Computer Science Department | Baltimore, MD 21228 | (301) 455-3962