![]() ![]() The latter is a commercial tool but the former, HDAT2, is an opensource project. We've had good success using the following 2 tools where I work. Offline-uncorrectable 100|100| 0 n/a 0 sectors Old-age Offline Reallocated-event-count 89| 89| 30 good 14877766723263 Pre-fail OnlineĬurrent-pending-sector 100|100| 0 n/a 0 sectors Old-age Online Hardware-ecc-recovered 45| 38| 0 n/a 5854752 Old-age Online Temperature-celsius-2 42| 58| 0 n/a 42C / 108F Old-age Online Load-cycle-count 1| 1| 0 n/a 248327 Old-age Online Power-off-retract-count 100|100| 0 n/a 15 Old-age Online High-fly-writes 100|100| 0 n/a 0 Old-age OnlineĪirflow-temperature-celsius 58| 42| 45 FAIL_PAST 42C / 108F Old-age Online Reported-uncorrect 100|100| 0 n/a 0 sectors Old-age OnlineĪttribute-188 100| 96| 0 n/a 0 Old-age Online Spin-retry-count 100|100| 97 good 0 Pre-fail Online Power-on-hours 89| 89| 0 n/a 424.4 days Old-age Online Reallocated-sector-count 100|100| 36 good 0 sectors Pre-fail Online Start-stop-count 98| 98| 20 good 2785 Old-age Online Spin-up-time 100| 99| 0 n/a 0 Pre-fail Online Determining a drives healthĪfter you've tortured the drive you can use this command to check out the general health of the drive: % sudo udisks -dump | grep -A 24 UpdatesĪttribute Current|Worst|Threshold Status Value Type Updates I wouldn't call hdparm a torture test but it does give you a rough idea of a drives overall performance. Timing buffered disk reads: 64 MB in 16.70 seconds = 3.83 MB/sec Timing buffer-cache reads: 128 MB in 1.25 seconds =102.40 MB/sec I usually use hdparm, for example: % hdparm -Tt /dev/hdb ![]() There's also bonnie++, as well as hdparm. Might be overkill but there's Phoronix Test Suite. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |