Imminent hard drive failure
Imminent hard drive failure
On bootup I am getting
1720 Smart hard drive detects imminent failure. (Failing attrib 5)
Backup hard drive and run HDD self test.
HDD self test said failed drive.
Can I transfer the drive to an external drive and boot to it?
1720 Smart hard drive detects imminent failure. (Failing attrib 5)
Backup hard drive and run HDD self test.
HDD self test said failed drive.
Can I transfer the drive to an external drive and boot to it?
Thanks,
Andy
Slacko 6.3.0 FULL INSTALL
JWM
File Manager - Thunar
Andy
Slacko 6.3.0 FULL INSTALL
JWM
File Manager - Thunar
Unlikely and I wouldn't even try.
The best thing you can do is stop using it immediately, get a second drive, boot into a disk clone utility from a CD or USB stick and clone the bad to the new and hope it lasts long enough to clone.
When a disk starts to fail it usually goes into self destruct mode very quickly.
The best thing you can do is stop using it immediately, get a second drive, boot into a disk clone utility from a CD or USB stick and clone the bad to the new and hope it lasts long enough to clone.
When a disk starts to fail it usually goes into self destruct mode very quickly.
"Just think of it as leaving early to avoid the rush" - T Pratchett
Recently I also had a hard drive "titsup-soon!" warning on bootup.
This was entirely plausible, because:
- I'm running an old box with a couple of very old HDDs.
- I've let one of my partitions get nearly full.
- I've had some file corruption probs following a forced shutdown.
Naturally I am backing up vigorously, but I am very keen to know how the warning is triggered - I'm sure my drives are way too old do anything very 'smart', so presumably there is a mechanism, of which I was unaware, within the boot process? If so, is it BIOS-generated, or e.g. a feature lurking within the Linux kernel?
(I'm running 4.3.1 multisession).
This was entirely plausible, because:
- I'm running an old box with a couple of very old HDDs.
- I've let one of my partitions get nearly full.
- I've had some file corruption probs following a forced shutdown.
Naturally I am backing up vigorously, but I am very keen to know how the warning is triggered - I'm sure my drives are way too old do anything very 'smart', so presumably there is a mechanism, of which I was unaware, within the boot process? If so, is it BIOS-generated, or e.g. a feature lurking within the Linux kernel?
(I'm running 4.3.1 multisession).
The things they do not tell you, are usually the clue to solving the problem.
When I was a kid I wanted to be older.... This is not what I expected
YaPI(any iso installer)
When I was a kid I wanted to be older.... This is not what I expected
YaPI(any iso installer)
I once had a disk that used to scream and groan like a banshee on power up.
SMART kept telling me it was about to fail so I cloned it to a new drive and as an experiment ran it in parallel mode with the new drive. It was three years of daily 6 hour use before it eventually actually threw a parity error.
SMART kept telling me it was about to fail so I cloned it to a new drive and as an experiment ran it in parallel mode with the new drive. It was three years of daily 6 hour use before it eventually actually threw a parity error.
"Just think of it as leaving early to avoid the rush" - T Pratchett
@scientist:
If you have a little money, it's well worth replacing your failing spinning drive with a
Solid State Drive (SSD). Some dealers in this area let go 240Gb's SSD's for +/-
$85 - $90 (in CAD$).
The difference in speed on your old box will be like night and day. Lightning fast.
With an SSD installed, it's as if you were computing in RAM all the time.
Just a thought.
If you have a little money, it's well worth replacing your failing spinning drive with a
Solid State Drive (SSD). Some dealers in this area let go 240Gb's SSD's for +/-
$85 - $90 (in CAD$).
The difference in speed on your old box will be like night and day. Lightning fast.
With an SSD installed, it's as if you were computing in RAM all the time.
Just a thought.
musher0
~~~~~~~~~~
"You want it darker? We kill the flame." (L. Cohen)
~~~~~~~~~~
"You want it darker? We kill the flame." (L. Cohen)
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- Joined: Mon 22 Feb 2016, 19:43
Oh yeah, I've had at least two of those. One was an 8.9" Acer Aspire One netbook, and one was an AMD desktop. If I just punch downwards at the top really hard a few times it would re-align itself and stop on both. No bad sectors on either though I think.Burn_IT wrote:I once had a disk that used to scream and groan like a banshee on power up.
SMART kept telling me it was about to fail so I cloned it to a new drive and as an experiment ran it in parallel mode with the new drive. It was three years of daily 6 hour use before it eventually actually threw a parity error.
I will consider it.musher0 wrote:@scientist:
If you have a little money, it's well worth replacing your failing spinning drive with a
Solid State Drive (SSD). Some dealers in this area let go 240Gb's SSD's for +/-
$85 - $90 (in CAD$).
The difference in speed on your old box will be like night and day. Lightning fast.
With an SSD installed, it's as if you were computing in RAM all the time.
Just a thought.
I am curious as to why Puppy gave no warning of the disk failure ?
Thanks,
Andy
Slacko 6.3.0 FULL INSTALL
JWM
File Manager - Thunar
Andy
Slacko 6.3.0 FULL INSTALL
JWM
File Manager - Thunar
Did you not read the info on what smart is?I am curious as to why Puppy gave no warning of the disk failure ?
The things they do not tell you, are usually the clue to solving the problem.
When I was a kid I wanted to be older.... This is not what I expected
YaPI(any iso installer)
When I was a kid I wanted to be older.... This is not what I expected
YaPI(any iso installer)
I could not find an internal SSD for my hp 6730b.musher0 wrote:@scientist:
If you have a little money, it's well worth replacing your failing spinning drive with a
Solid State Drive (SSD). Some dealers in this area let go 240Gb's SSD's for +/-
$85 - $90 (in CAD$).
The difference in speed on your old box will be like night and day. Lightning fast.
With an SSD installed, it's as if you were computing in RAM all the time.
Just a thought.
Thanks,
Andy
Slacko 6.3.0 FULL INSTALL
JWM
File Manager - Thunar
Andy
Slacko 6.3.0 FULL INSTALL
JWM
File Manager - Thunar
Should be able to find a ssd that has a SATA interface.I could not find an internal SSD for my hp 6730b.
The hard drive in the laptop should be SATA.
Just make sure it is SATA.
Only issue is the ssd will probably be SATA III and the laptop interface will probably be SATA II.
It will still work, but the speed will be limited to what SATA II can provide.
SATA II has bandwidth throughput 300 Mb/s.
SATA III has bandwidth throughput 600 Mb/s.
Try getting a ssd that has speed of around 300 Mb/s
Those will be the cheapest.
Why pay for speed you can not use with your interface.
Still should be way faster than a 5400 hard drive that is typically giving 30 to 50 Mb/s speeds.
The things they do not tell you, are usually the clue to solving the problem.
When I was a kid I wanted to be older.... This is not what I expected
YaPI(any iso installer)
When I was a kid I wanted to be older.... This is not what I expected
YaPI(any iso installer)
Just go to You Tube and look for how to install a SSD in a laptop.
SSd's are the same size as a laptop hard drive 2.5 inch.
SSd's are the same size as a laptop hard drive 2.5 inch.
The things they do not tell you, are usually the clue to solving the problem.
When I was a kid I wanted to be older.... This is not what I expected
YaPI(any iso installer)
When I was a kid I wanted to be older.... This is not what I expected
YaPI(any iso installer)