Stingray88
Dabbler
- Joined
- Aug 19, 2015
- Messages
- 38
OK cool, here it is. https://dl.dropboxusercontent.com/u/5826201/debug-freenas-20160225011010..tgz
WTF is going on with your drive temperatures? Do you have SMART temp warnings enabled? Does the problem occur during scrubs?Lifetime Min/Max Temperature: 22/73 Celsius
Lifetime Min/Max Temperature: 22/73 Celsius
Lifetime Min/Max Temperature: 22/72 Celsius
Lifetime Min/Max Temperature: 22/75 Celsius
Lifetime Min/Max Temperature: 22/69 Celsius
Lifetime Min/Max Temperature: 22/72 Celsius
Same way their MTBF is supposed to be hundreds of thousands of hours.Hmm, aren't most drives rated at like 60 Celsius max?
Yeah, but I need to believe the MTBF (mostly) since I buy my drives used and can't change that. At least with the temps, I can control them. ;)Same way their MTBF is supposed to be hundreds of thousands of hours.
In other words, it's bullshit.
This.the lifetime of the drive in general?
The consensus here is that over 40C is cause for concern. I have one drive that regularly reaches 41C during scrubs, which I can live with.I'm setting it up now to warn me if it goes above 45C.
OK, but the question remains, is there any correlation between scheduled scrubs, or any other regularly scheduled task, and the failures? Don't forget to look for regularly scheduled activity elsewhere on your network too.as far as I can tell the drives are averaging in the 30s
The consensus here is that over 40C is cause for concern. I have one drive that regularly reaches 41C during scrubs, which I can live with.
OK, but the question remains, is there any correlation between scheduled scrubs, or any other regularly scheduled task, and the failures? Don't forget to look for regularly scheduled activity elsewhere on your network too.
Is that static an IP outside of your DHCP range?but FreeNAS is given a static
Is that static an IP outside of your DHCP range?
Do you have a Gateway and Name Server entered (Under [Network] - [Global Configurtaion])?
I know all this is in your debug, but I am too lazy to go through it all. :p
Hmm, well then on your router do you have at least an IP Reservation for your FreeNas (via MAC Address)? If not, then maybe you would rather do that? But as far as if you manually assign an IP (on the FreeNas Server), you want to use an IP that is NOT in your DHCP range.
Was talking about in FreeNas, here is what mine looks like (for reference - "Domain" was redacted):In FreeNAS or the router? I've never manually set anything like that in either, so do you think that could be an issue?
Ah, that's what I meant by a static, that I had reserved an IP on my router for FreeNAS based on the MAC address. Sorry for the confusion...Hmm, well then on your router do you have at least an IP Reservation for your FreeNas (via MAC Address)? If not, then maybe you would rather do that? But as far as if you manually assign an IP (on the FreeNas Server), you want to use an IP that is NOT in your DHCP range.
Example:
- My router is setup to allocate IP addresses (DHCP)
- My DHCP range is 192.168.10.50 - 192.168.10.200
- So on my FreeNas Server, I set the IP to something that is NOT being doled out by DHCP. Say 192.168.10.25...
Was talking about in FreeNas, here is what mine looks like (for reference - "Domain" was redacted:
Yep, that is the way I have mine setup.but I don't know what I should put for the Gateway and Name server. Would it be the router IP?