Ben Paley wrote:
On Friday 28 April 2006 10:25, Alex Zbyslaw wrote:
Try sysutils/smartmontools or a disk checker from the disk
manufacturer. Most provide one.
smartmontools seems to confirm there's nothing wrong with the disk:
############################################
smartctl version 5.33 [i386-portbld-freebsd6.1] Copyright (C) 2002-4 Bruce
Allen
Home page is http://smartmontools.sourceforge.net/
=== START OF READ SMART DATA SECTION ===
SMART Self-test log structure revision number 1
Num Test_Description Status Remaining LifeTime(hours)
LBA_of_first_error
# 1 Extended offline Completed without error 00% 3069 -
# 2 Extended offline Completed without error 00% 3064 -
# 3 Short offline Completed without error 00% 492 -
# 4 Short offline Completed without error 00% 0 -
############################################
Any more ideas?
I assume this was from you running a new long test. If so, then no. I
missed most of the thread, I'm afraid, just caught the gist. Have you
tried serving the same files from another machine with identical apache
setup? If that serves them OK then it shouldn't be apache. That's all
I can think of, besides *possibly* there is either some fault on the
disk controller or perhaps the FreeBSD driver. You could try upgrading
to some newer FreeBSD if there is one but that's quite drastic and might
solve nothing. Same for swapping the disk and or controller, if you
have any spares. (If you have another disk, then try moving the data to
it and comparing, then get apache to server from the new disk and see if
that helps), You may have tried all that already.
--Alex
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