The consensus was that the "sd" driver cannot always get the correct RPM value. Casper Dik related, "The specific kstat was removed and later releases do not report "RPM"." And he pointed out that since they're ST318406, they are rated to run at 10000 RPM. Makes sense to me! Thanks also to Mark McManus. d ====================================================================== Original Post: Scott Pham's summary mentioned "iostat -E" and it reminded me of questions I have about how this command gets its information. For example, iostat -E reports the following on one of our 5.6 servers: sd45 Soft Errors: 0 Hard Errors: 0 Transport Errors: 0 Vendor: SEAGATE Product: ST318404LSUN18G Revision: 8507 Serial No: 0024T0JLF9 RPM: 7200 Heads: 19 Size: 18.11GB <18110967808 bytes> Media Error: 0 Device Not Ready: 0 No Device: 0 Recoverable: 0 Illegal Request: 0 Predictive Failure Analysis: 0 However, the disk is supposed to be rated 10000 RPM, not 7200. So, it brings to mind a couple of questions I don't know how to answer: 1. Is there a limitation in the 5.6 OS that won't report RPM > 7200? 2. Are the disks mis-labeled? 3. How can I determine if the disks really are or aren't rated at what we believe we purchased, ie. 10000 RPM (all other data is correct in the output of iostat -E)? "If it dies, it's biology. If it blows up, it's chemistry, and if it doesn't work, it's physics." -- University bathroom graffito t?t ~ _______________________________________________ sunmanagers mailing list sunmanagers@sunmanagers.org http://www.sunmanagers.org/mailman/listinfo/sunmanagersReceived on Thu Feb 7 10:14:12 2002
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