I have seen that a couple times, unlikely but
possible. Maybe review your RAM configuration too, ensure that
the sticks are on the same supported refresh rate and
distributed across the slots in an approved way.
Regards,
Jesper
On 2024-03-19 21:47, Franco Martelli wrote:
> On 19/03/24 at 15:43, Jesper Dybdal wrote:
>
>>
>> My plan is to boot a rescue disk and mount that
partition read-only.
>> Then:
>> * If the file looks ok after reboot, then I'll
strongly suspect the
>> RAM - and run memtest.
>> * Otherwise, I'll have to run fsck and see what
happens.
>>
>> kernel version:
>> root@nuser:~# uname -a
>> Linux nuser 5.10.0-28-amd64 #1 SMP Debian
5.10.209-2 (2024-01-31)
>> x86_64 GNU/Linux
>>
>> The partition in question is a RAID 1 controlled
by md.
>
> Another check you can perform it is on the RAID
array, by default it
> runs on the first Sunday of each month at 00:57. You
should have this
> file /etc/cron.d/mdadm that takes care to run this
check monthly.
>
> Before you reboot, does it look OK /proc/mdstat ?
>
--
Jesper Dybdal
https://www.dybdal.dk