Hello list, Over the last few weeks I've been having odd things go bump in the night. This is a KDE amd64 system with /usr under / and no initrd.
The first thing was that my screen saver was being overlaid with a plain default desktop. That was fixed by creating a new user for myself and setting it up from scratch. Tedium galore, especially importing into KMail. Then I found KMail creating duplicates of existing e-mails. It would make a few when I started the program, then some more when I told it to fetch mail, and even more when I clicked into the folder containing the copies. Several other little oddities were happening too, and I began to suspect my six-year-old disks. Well, I wanted to put some shiny new SSDs in anyway, so I used this as the excuse. That seemed to fix everything and I ran for a week or two in welcome peace. Then this morning when I came back to the machine (it runs 24x7x52 running BOINC projects) the screen saver overlay was back. Then I noticed that the three Konsole windows I keep on one desktop had been resized one pixel smaller, so that the last line didn't fit. I'm particular about that (OCPD?) and would never have left it that way. When I came to KMail I found that it wouldn't loop outside the current folder. I have it set to loop through all of them, so I changed it, restarted KMail, changed it back to loop through all folders and restarted KMail. It still wouldn't go outside the current folder. I also notice it's ignoring my one auto-correction setting - to capitalise the initial letter of a sentence. So I ran an emerge -eK world and restarted. No change. Clearly something is changing in my home directory tree, but what? I can't keep on creating new user accounts. The last thing is that at reboot the RAID-1 volume manager often fails to start. It says afterwards that it's running, but all the /dev/vg7/* are absent (that's where the logical volumes live). The file system root lives on /dev/md5 with metadata < 1.0, while /dev/vg7 has metadata >1.0. The fact that it happens often but not always suggests a timing problem to me. # rc-update -s -v | grep -e raid -e lvm lvm | boot lvm-monitoring | lvmetad | mdraid | boot (This reminds me that since the last update of lvm2 I haven't been able to work out how to set it up to cause no errors.) Can anyone suggest a way to tackle all these? I'm puzzled in particular by the apparent consistency in symptoms, apart from the RAID problem which I think only became a nuisance after installing the SSDs. Gkrellm shows CPU temps of 50 to 55C, which seems normal enough. Could I have something misconfigured in the kernel? I'm reduced to making general arm-waving noises... -- Rgds Peter