Received: (from majordomo@localhost) by oss.sgi.com (8.11.2/8.11.3) id f6TBiAZ08261 for linux-xfs-outgoing; Sun, 29 Jul 2001 04:44:10 -0700 Received: from gusi.leathercollection.ph (postfix@gusi.leathercollection.ph [202.163.192.10]) by oss.sgi.com (8.11.2/8.11.3) with SMTP id f6TBi8V08236 for ; Sun, 29 Jul 2001 04:44:08 -0700 Received: from gusi.leathercollection.local (gusi.leathercollection.local [192.168.0.1]) by gusi.leathercollection.ph (Postfix) with ESMTP id 27DCEC08298 for ; Sun, 29 Jul 2001 19:44:06 +0800 (PHT) Date: Sun, 29 Jul 2001 19:44:06 +0800 (PHT) From: Federico Sevilla III X-X-Sender: To: Linux XFS Mailing List Subject: Re: Houston Summer -> duplicate inode range In-Reply-To: Message-ID: MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: TEXT/PLAIN; charset=US-ASCII Sender: owner-linux-xfs@oss.sgi.com Precedence: bulk On Sat, 28 Jul 2001 at 20:27, Chris Bednar wrote: > Today, I had a disk overheat, which led to severe corruption on an XFS > volume. I have absolutely no experience or knowledge enough to help you out with your problem, but I was wondering: how does one monitor the temperature of the hard drives? I have sensors on my motherboard that I presume get the ambient temperature readings inside the case, and my hard drives are not too far away, but I was wondering if maybe hard drives have embedded thermal sensors? Or should the paranoid install some thermal sensor plastered on each drive? --> Jijo -- Federico Sevilla III :: jijo@leathercollection.ph Network Administrator :: The Leather Collection, Inc.