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Top Forums Programming write() issue during a low level hdd access Post 302400507 by sponnusa on Wednesday 3rd of March 2010 10:47:02 AM
Old 03-03-2010
Quote:
Originally Posted by Corona688
Well that's new. Thanks for telling. According to earlier conversation you couldn't get it in windows without a custom device driver. which brings me back to my earlier suggestion of the linux kernel mailing list. If you haven't contacted them earlier, now would be a great time, as this thread's done a great job of rattling out what your requirements are.
I guess, we are debating on what I wrote on this thread rather. I had mentioned that I wanted to zero fill a drive in my first post.

Let's not go over into frenzy again! Smilie

I am able to do it on Windows or in DOS without any special device drivers. If I want to send commands to the hardware directly, I am able to send commands to the hardware directly. It works fine in Windows and in DOS (Well, I quote DOS for historical reasons as the initial erasure program was developed in DOS about 14 years ago!).

The last try I had with Linux was with the SG_IO commands (I believe that is the method of sending RAW ATA COMMANDS to the drive) and that did not work too. The command, say sg_dd is unable to identify the bad blocks / sectors on the hdd during the write process (on a drive which has failed with Windows, DOS and another Windows based disk erasure applications).

I guess, I am clear now, if not please let me know.
 

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STRESS(1)							   User Commands							 STRESS(1)

NAME
stress - tool to impose load on and stress test systems SYNOPSIS
stress [OPTION [ARG]] ... DESCRIPTION
`stress' imposes certain types of compute stress on your system -?, --help show this help statement --version show version statement -v, --verbose be verbose -q, --quiet be quiet -n, --dry-run show what would have been done -t, --timeout N timeout after N seconds --backoff N wait factor of N microseconds before work starts -c, --cpu N spawn N workers spinning on sqrt() -i, --io N spawn N workers spinning on sync() -m, --vm N spawn N workers spinning on malloc()/free() --vm-bytes B malloc B bytes per vm worker (default is 256MB) --vm-stride B touch a byte every B bytes (default is 4096) --vm-hang N sleep N secs before free (default is none, 0 is inf) --vm-keep redirty memory instead of freeing and reallocating -d, --hdd N spawn N workers spinning on write()/unlink() --hdd-bytes B write B bytes per hdd worker (default is 1GB) --hdd-noclean do not unlink files created by hdd workers Example: stress --cpu 8 --io 4 --vm 2 --vm-bytes 128M --timeout 10s Note: Numbers may be suffixed with s,m,h,d,y (time) or B,K,M,G (size). SEE ALSO
The full documentation for stress is maintained as a Texinfo manual. If the info and stress programs are properly installed at your site, the command info stress should give you access to the complete manual. stress 1.0.1 August 2009 STRESS(1)
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