Does hda: Lost Interrupt always mean disk trouble?

Posted by: tfabris

Does hda: Lost Interrupt always mean disk trouble? - 10/02/2004 15:25

If you see "hda: Lost Interrupt" on the serial port, does that mean for sure 100 percent a hardware problem with the disk drive? (Cable, etc.)

Or could it theoretically be a software issue?

Reason is: I haven't until now had any reason to suspect disk trouble recently. But I'm messing around with Alpha 6, the latest Hijack, emphatic, and gpsapp, trying to get them to play nice together. I need a fairly large reservecache setting for gpsapp an emphatic to cohabitate peacefully, but the database rebuild code in Alpha 6 seems to be unhappy with reservecaches and causes kernel panics. While messing around with this stuff, I sometimes see the "Lost Interrupt" message on the serial port while it's building the databases.

Normally I would go by my own advice and say "yeah, it's hardware", but I've got a lot of new variables here all of a sudden and I don't know what to think.
Posted by: mlord

Re: Does hda: Lost Interrupt always mean disk trou - 10/02/2004 16:08

It's always hardware. But not necessarily something wrong.

Some hardware is not perfect in design, and with the right combination of events, can lose an interrupt in software. If that makes any sense.

But I'd check the cable/headers if I saw that message more than once.

Cheers
Posted by: tfabris

Re: Does hda: Lost Interrupt always mean disk trou - 10/02/2004 16:15

I checked the cables/headers, and I think that I'll probably touch up the solder joints on the IDE header next time I'm in there. And maybe order a new cable from Stu.

But after a FSCK, everything seems to be doing OK. <crosses fingers>