Unfortunately no one can be told what fun_plug is - you have to see it for yourself.
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Hey all,
I was reading the recent news about all of the failing Seagate drives. (http://www.theregister.co.uk/2009/01/16 … re_plague/)
I believe I've got two of these running in my DNS-323, but I can't seem to find a way to check the serial number. Yes, I could just power down and take the drives out, but since the firmware seems to die on boot, I'd prefer to leave them up and running in the device.
I tried ssh and hdparm, but it just returns 'Invalid argument' for either the -i or -I commands. I read in another post that the DNS-323 controller doesn't support this info.
Does anyone know where I can find the serial numbers for the drives? Seagate is offering firmware upgrades for affected drives.
Thanks!
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thriftynomad wrote:
I believe I've got two of these running in my DNS-323, but I can't seem to find a way to check the serial number. Yes, I could just power down and take the drives out, but since the firmware seems to die on boot, I'd prefer to leave them up and running in the device.
If you haven't, yet, install smartmontools: http://www.inreto.de/dns323/fun-plug/0. … rtmontools
# smartctl -i -d marvell /dev/sda
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Fonz, vielen Dank für die schnelle Antwort!
That worked perfectly. Unfortunately, it told me that my DNS-323 has two 1TB Seagates that are both on the list of affected drives!! From what I understand, Seagate is going to prepare a firmware upgrade next week... *crosses fingers until then*
cheers all!
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fonz wrote:
thriftynomad wrote:
Unfortunately, it told me that my DNS-323 has two 1TB Seagates that are both on the list of affected drives!!
I have one of these, too.
I actually just built mine so I will be returning the Seagate drives. I think I'm going to get the Maxtor 1TB drives that are on sale this week at Frys. Any opinions on the Maxtor drives?
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bobbyincognito wrote:
fonz wrote:
thriftynomad wrote:
Unfortunately, it told me that my DNS-323 has two 1TB Seagates that are both on the list of affected drives!!
I have one of these, too.
I actually just built mine so I will be returning the Seagate drives. I think I'm going to get the Maxtor 1TB drives that are on sale this week at Frys. Any opinions on the Maxtor drives?
If you buy Maxtor 1TB drives you will probably have exactly the same issue. Maxtor is owned by Seagate. Refering to http://seagate.custkb.com/seagate/crm/s … cId=207931 you will note that the DiamondMax 22 series of drives are affected and these are Maxtor.
I suggest you look at Wester Digital, Hitachi, or Samsung if you wish to avoid Seagate / Maxtor drives at the moment.
I currently have two 1TB Seagate drives ST31000340AS and ST31000333AS both with the SD15 firmware. Seagate support have informed me that both my drives will need a firmware upgrade because they could potentially get this issue.
Previously I had two ST31000340AS drives in my DNS 323 except one of these failed in late November with this issue. Purchase date was late June so it lasted only five months. I RMA'd that drive and they returned me a ST31000333AS and surely by that time they would have known about the issue but shipped me another potentially faulty drive anyways. I'm not very happy about that so it looks like my next drive will be Wester Digital after being 12 years exclusively using Seagate and not having a single failure until now.
If you have any of these affected drives in your DNS 323 I suggest you leave it on permenently until you can get the firmware upgrade and backup all of your data prior to rebooting. Mine bricked itself upon booting up the DNS 323 as the hard drive light kept flashign blue for about 20 minutes until finally changing to amber. As a precaution I've also turned power management off to prevent the DNS 323 from spinning down the drives just incase the drives can brick themselves then as well.
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thriftynomad wrote:
Hey all,
I was reading the recent news about all of the failing Seagate drives. (http://www.theregister.co.uk/2009/01/16 … re_plague/)
I believe I've got two of these running in my DNS-323, but I can't seem to find a way to check the serial number. Yes, I could just power down and take the drives out, but since the firmware seems to die on boot, I'd prefer to leave them up and running in the device.
I tried ssh and hdparm, but it just returns 'Invalid argument' for either the -i or -I commands. I read in another post that the DNS-323 controller doesn't support this info.
Does anyone know where I can find the serial numbers for the drives? Seagate is offering firmware upgrades for affected drives.
Thanks!
My DNS-323 (fw 1.06) shows the drive serial numbers on the status page.
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mhoare1984 wrote:
bobbyincognito wrote:
fonz wrote:
I have one of these, too.
I actually just built mine so I will be returning the Seagate drives. I think I'm going to get the Maxtor 1TB drives that are on sale this week at Frys. Any opinions on the Maxtor drives?
If you buy Maxtor 1TB drives you will probably have exactly the same issue. Maxtor is owned by Seagate. Refering to http://seagate.custkb.com/seagate/crm/s … cId=207931 you will note that the DiamondMax 22 series of drives are affected and these are Maxtor.
I suggest you look at Wester Digital, Hitachi, or Samsung if you wish to avoid Seagate / Maxtor drives at the moment.
I currently have two 1TB Seagate drives ST31000340AS and ST31000333AS both with the SD15 firmware. Seagate support have informed me that both my drives will need a firmware upgrade because they could potentially get this issue.
Previously I had two ST31000340AS drives in my DNS 323 except one of these failed in late November with this issue. Purchase date was late June so it lasted only five months. I RMA'd that drive and they returned me a ST31000333AS and surely by that time they would have known about the issue but shipped me another potentially faulty drive anyways. I'm not very happy about that so it looks like my next drive will be Wester Digital after being 12 years exclusively using Seagate and not having a single failure until now.
If you have any of these affected drives in your DNS 323 I suggest you leave it on permenently until you can get the firmware upgrade and backup all of your data prior to rebooting. Mine bricked itself upon booting up the DNS 323 as the hard drive light kept flashign blue for about 20 minutes until finally changing to amber. As a precaution I've also turned power management off to prevent the DNS 323 from spinning down the drives just incase the drives can brick themselves then as well.
Frack...I just came back with the two drives. Thanks, you've saved me a lot of time now. I'll probably go back and grab one of them "Green" WD drives now.
Updated: Looks like the WD Green Power HDD have some problems too (http://www.silentpcreview.com/forums/vi … mp;start=0). I think at this point, I'm going to keep my drives on and running 24/7 until Seagate has a firmware fix next week.
Last edited by bobbyincognito (2009-01-18 10:17:05)
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I have 10 of the Seagate 1TB drives in use, some NS, the rest AS. I managed to upgrade the NS firmware to SN05 from SN03 and SN04 a couple of days ago, there was a measurable performance gain and some issues got resolved.
The AS models should have a firmware upgrade available next week, in the below forum they claim Tuesday is the day and there will be a serial number checker on Seagate's website apparently too.
http://www.msfn.org/board/index.php?sho … amp;st=740
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skydreamer wrote:
I managed to upgrade the NS firmware to SN05 from SN03 and SN04 a couple of days ago, there was a measurable performance gain and some issues got resolved.
Does this mean that SN05 is safe?
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There's a serial number check online, now: http://support.seagate.com/sncheck.html
I'm safe
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Seagate published KB article - http://seagate.custkb.com/seagate/crm/s … cId=207931
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Awesome, I just checked both my 1 TB Seagate drives and they're NOT affected! Still, I installed smartmontools and added the following in my login script:
# show smartmon output; install smartmontools package first
echo "-[ smart, mon quickie disk 1 then 2 ]-"
smartctl -H -d marvell /dev/sda | grep health
smartctl -d marvell -H /dev/sdb | grep health
echo ""
Apparently, the quick health test should be able to pinpoint a failure before it appears.
I will soon downgrade to the 1.5 firmware, since my drives operate at the 43C constant temperature and I don't care much about the noise - I will most likely move the unit in the garage, no need to have it close.
Great unit!
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fonz wrote:
If you haven't, yet, install smartmontools: http://www.inreto.de/dns323/fun-plug/0. … rtmontools
Another option is:
# dmesg|grep -i seagate Vendor: Seagate Model: ST31000340AS Rev: SD15 Vendor: Seagate Model: ST31000340AS Rev: SD15
By the way, as you can see my drives both use firmware SD15... Doh!
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InBonobo wrote:
Apparently, the quick health test should be able to pinpoint a failure before it appears.
I don't think so... It seems that the Seagate drives are dying without any warning, and failing *terribly* (they just die, BIOS won't recognize them at all). Doesn't look like an error that SMART will detect/predict...
Regarding the online serial checker, lot of people have reported that testing their already-dead-drive's serial number on it returns that it is'nt affected by the problem and doesn't need a firmware upgrade. Then... How comes they're already dead and with the exact symptoms as the other drives? It seems that the online checker is not 100% reliable
And by the way... Using the online serial checker:
Your drive 9QJ29672 IS affected. Your drive 9QJ2D1S6 IS affected.
Woohoo!!!! BOTH drives in my CH3SNAS are affected... Big applause for Seagate, please.
Last edited by devotee (2009-01-19 01:39:48)
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fonz wrote:
Does this mean that SN05 is safe?
Fonz- I think that the issue is with a particular combination of the spindle motor, servo and electronics board rather than a plain bug in the firmware the way this issue is presented. I used to be an EMEA service manager for a large US electronics multinational and we did a few recalls too so I understand the mechanism quite well and can read reasonably well between the lines.
What Seagate do in their new firmware is a workaround for some values that happen to be out of tolerance but not degrading fast over a period of time. Hence the shortfalls can be compensated for by altering the code that is behind the lock ups.
As with any other product life cycle the 1TB disks are reaching their maturity therefore there is a strong drive to cut the production costs plus the credit crunch with the market downturn and this introduces higher risks in quality terms especially in such carefully tuned products as the large hard disks.
So back to your original question- I think that the older NS disks are reasonably safe, which means firmware SN03,04. However I am going to watch this space because there might be more to these failures, which even the Seagate engineers are not fully aware of yet and in the end could widen the base of the affected drives.
Last edited by skydreamer (2009-01-19 03:07:03)
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New firmware that (hopefully) fixes this issue is now available:
http://seagate.custkb.com/seagate/crm/s … cId=207931
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devotee wrote:
New firmware that (hopefully) fixes this issue is now available:
http://seagate.custkb.com/seagate/crm/s … cId=207931
It is really only for one particular P/N, none of my 1TB drives is from the affected series. I even tried to upgrade the firmware and it refused to do so because of the incorrect P/N.
The technote starts:
Welcome, Seagate hard drive owners.
I think it would be more fitting:
Welcome, Seagate hard tried drive owners.
Last edited by skydreamer (2009-01-19 14:14:29)
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So now that Seagate has posted an updated firmware, does anyone know if its possible to upgrade the drive firmware without removing the disks from the NAS? AFAIK Seagate has posted a bootable ISO, so I have to yank the drives, connect them to my Windows PC, boot the ISO, and flash? Yikes. What if I'm running a sole macbook pro? Then I need to get a SATA-to-USB adapter?
Urgh...
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Hmmm
they may have posted updated firmware, but the fix for the Maxtor drive STM31000340AS is broken ! The file is OK, but the contained iso is invalid. I've emailed disk-support. The firmware for the Seagate ST31000340AS appears to be usable. I noted its twice as long as that for the Maxtor fix.
If you only have a Mac, or a even just a Windows laptop you're stuffed, The firmware appears to be applied by a DOS based tool installed from the bootable CD you create from the downloaded iso. I doubt that will drive a USB-to-SATA adapter. From the readme notes with the ST31000340AS firmware, which I guess will be similar;
Basic instructions:
1) Create the FreeDOS bootable floppy or CD-ROM.
2) Use a standard desktop PC with an integrated SATA controller, or
a common SATA add-in controller like a Promise SATA150-TX2.
3) Disconnect all PATA or SATA devices from the system, except the
device needing the firmware update.
4) Boot the system using the update floppy or CD.
5) At the DOS prompt run the flash.bat file
BEWARE, you can find the same file "MooseDT-32MB-MX1A.ISO" at various other sites on the internet. This currently is a previous version WITH THE SAME FILENAME. Seagate warn you not to use it.
Once the final working version is released, with the same filename, all manner of confusion will ensue.
What a way to ru[i]n a company !
regards - plugs
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It's just crazy!! I'm holding myself from updating anything in my drives until the situation becomes stable... Lots of people saying the updater fails, the -300 and -303 part numbers problem, people reporting dead drives after updating to SD1A, published "patched" firmwares, "new patched" firmwares just being announced and waiting for release...
First thing I should do is buy a WD 1TB external hard disk, hook it to the NAS USB port and rsync everything from the box to it. Luckily my CH3SNAS contents still fit in 1TB (I have 2 x 1TB volumes). That was my plan already (having an external disk for backup purposes) but I hadn't planned to buy it right now.
What a nightmare...
Last edited by devotee (2009-01-20 04:52:26)
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Guess what? I updated affected ST3500320AS drive with the new firmware, and now the drive is .. dead! Actually it is still being detected by BIOS, but at POST message it hangs while the system is trying to communicate with the drive.
Repeated firmware updates with the same firmware do work.. which means.. SD1A is simply a crappy firmware! No wonder KB article was taken down "for validation"
I spoke with Seagate support, few lessons: a) we cannot revert the firmware back to version SD15 from SD1A b) new firmware should be ready closer to the end of this week
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New firmware from Seagate:
http://seagate.custkb.com/seagate/crm/s … cId=207951
Hopefully they got it right this time...
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I've just updated my ST31000340AS disks with firmware SD1A released today. The process went smoothly on a PC with integrated SATA ports and, once plugged on the CH3SNAS, they seem to be working as expected (at least, like they worked before).
Vendor: Seagate Model: ST31000340AS Rev: SD1A Type: Direct-Access ANSI SCSI revision: 03 Vendor: Seagate Model: ST31000340AS Rev: SD1A Type: Direct-Access ANSI SCSI revision: 03
I'll make regular backups on an external USB disk as I planned (even before knowing about this mess), let's hope the drives won't have problems.
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Just one thing: the leds are blue on startup, after a little while they go pink, and one of them (the left one) is blinking (pink-red/amber)
No problem about the pink leds (I already had them before, I think it' well-known problem after updating to the latest firmwares), but I don't like the left led blinking like the disk has problems (however, no problems are reported by dmesg or smartctl). I don't understand
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