Not if you have backed up your data. You have a backup of your data right?
Yeah the important stuff is backed up, but I am still concerned my entire OS will suddenly go kaput. How fucked am I?
If you have everything you need backed up you can reinstall on a new hard drive and restore everything you need. So you should not be completely fucked. Just an inconvenience you might have to go through. You will lose the stuff not backed up so if any of that is a pain to get again it might be more painful to restore everything.
Others have said some thing you might want to try. But having a spare disk you can swap to is never a bad idea. Disks to fail and you should plan for what to do when they do. Backing up your data is a good first step.
I would say it is not a bad idea to just get a new disk now and go through the process of restoring everything anyway - you can treat it like your disk has failed and do what you would need to do to restore. With the ability to swap back when you need to.
This is a good way to find things you might have missed in your backups.
Looks like either bad cable or failing drive.
- Back up your data now
- Reseat the cables for the drive
- Run a self test on the drive -
smartctl -t long
- if it doesn’t pass, then the drive is trash. If it does, then it might limp along a bit longer before catastrophically failing
What kind of machine is this, laptop? Desktop? If desktop, check the cables. Otherwise I’d switch out the drive.
I have no idea what all of that is but it looks like something I would worry about. I’d say it’s time for a clean install and thinking of a new root password.
I’d say it’s time for a clean install and thinking of a new root password.
Huh? What has that to do with a possibly failing drive?
It’s the same error, no matter how many times I reinstall. I assume it’s a hardware issue
Can be a distro/setup issue as well. Also you should’ve added this info to your post. It’s very useful for troubleshooting the issue.