Sponsored Content
Special Forums Hardware What are the possible action regarding having bad sector in my ext4 root partition? Post 302564067 by Corona688 on Wednesday 12th of October 2011 06:27:13 PM
Old 10-12-2011
First off, understand that modern hard drives ("modern" as in "last 15-25 years") have bad-sector remapping. When they spot a sector going bad, they take its contents and put it in a 'spare' location without telling you. So: your hard drive doesn't have a bad sector.

It has so many bad sectors that it's run out of spares. That could be a quarter of the drive or more, gone bad. This drive is not safe to use. Get your data off and stop using it before it betrays you.

You can't low-level format anymore. The densities they have these days, they only have the precision to do that at the factory. Dead sectors are dead for keeps.

A 'sector' is just a collection of zeroes and ones, there's not a magic combo of 512 bytes that makes a sector go bad. dd_rescue is safe. bad sectors can't be transferred. dd_rescue can't even read them, it fills in zeroes and skips.

Did you dd the entire disk, or just the partition?

Last edited by Corona688; 10-12-2011 at 07:35 PM..
 

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. Filesystems, Disks and Memory

boot sector bad? or is is something else?

SuSE 8 Both LILO and GRUB are complaining about not being able to write to the boot sector. Is this definitely a problem with the drive or is there another possible problem? I've checked the BIOS and I don't think the problem is there....it's probably the drive. Just another Linux user (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: HumanBeanDip
1 Replies

2. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users

What is the command in Openservr 5.0.4 in recovering from bad sector

Hi, Pls can someone assist me with the command to be use to recover from bad sector in Openserver 5.0.4. This is because during level 0 backup the backup will hang when it gets to the bad sector. Pls contact me ::email removed:: Thanks Kayode (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: kayode
1 Replies

3. Solaris

Reinstall root partition

I had Solaris 8 installed on a Ultra 10 machine but during a shutdown the root partition got corrupted. I have 3 other partitions on the drive (var, swap, home). Is there a way to reinstall the root partition without effecting the other partitions? Also, when I run format from single user mode I... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: jbestor
4 Replies

4. Solaris

Can't metattach root partition

I'm mirroring up a T2000. Able to metainit and metattach all partitions with the exception of root. Getting the following error: metattach: <hostname>; c1t1d0s0; is mounted on / I'm stumped. By the way, target 1 is the boot disk. (7 Replies)
Discussion started by: Probos
7 Replies

5. Solaris

increasing root / partition

Dear all, I have a root partition which is 20 G in size. I have var and /tmp as seperate file systems. But this 20 G of root is not sufficeint. I want to increase the size of the / partition. Is there any way to increase with out down time. my df -k output is Filesystem ... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: jegaraman
4 Replies

6. Solaris

Root partition filling up

I have a T1000 Sparc server that has a relatively small root partition which is 24Gb and a larger partition dedicated to /export/home that is approximately 100 Gb. We have a lot of data going to /var/audit and to /var/core/corefiles. Is there any non-destructive way to redirect files from... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: goose25
4 Replies

7. Solaris

Bad user root in crontab

Hi everyone, I got error which is "!bad user (root)" in crontab... I tried changing password, I checked etc/cron/cron.allow and cron.deny, And also I checked the permissions of my files, its(my crontab script) still not working.... Please help... (12 Replies)
Discussion started by: ijustneeda
12 Replies

8. Solaris

Need to partition root

Hello guys, I am using Solaris 10 x86 OS. While installing OS i have allocated entire 10 GB space to the root. Now i am not able to create new partition it says me "out of range" or "<cylinder number> not expected". Can someone please help me to allocated a default recommended space i.e 8GB or... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: bhargav90
2 Replies

9. SCO

Resize root partition

I have SCO Openserver 5.0.5 Root partition is 96% full and I would like to make it bigger. How can this be done? 1) Can I use 'dd' to backup 'root' and then backup '/u' to a third hard disk, then divvy the primary hard disk to have a larger 'root' filesystem (i.e. previous root + u) 2) ... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: grips03
5 Replies

10. Ubuntu

Regarding OS partition and root user

Dear Concern, I am new in ubuntu. Is root user disable in ubuntu? Also, is os partition default in ubuntu? I don't find any feature to create customize mount point to install OS. Below is my current OS partition. amirislam@blnidapp03:~$ df -h Filesystem Size Used... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: makauser
1 Replies
BAD144(8)						      System Manager's Manual							 BAD144(8)

NAME
bad144 - read/write DEC standard 144 bad sector information SYNOPSIS
bad144 disktype disk [ sno [ bad ... ] ] DESCRIPTION
Bad144 can be used to inspect the information stored on a disk that is used by the disk drivers to implement bad sector forwarding. The format of the information is specified by DEC standard 144, as follows. The bad sector information is located in the first 5 even numbered sectors of the last track of the disk pack. There are five identical copies of the information, described by the dkbad structure. Only the first of these copies is used. Replacement sectors are allocated starting with the first sector before the bad sector information and working backwards towards the begin- ning of the disk. A maximum of 126 bad sectors can be supported. The position of the bad sector in the bad sector table determines which replacement sector it corresponds to. The bad sector information and replacement sectors are conventionally only accessible through the ``h'' file system partition of the disk. If that partition is used for a file system, the user is responsible for making sure that it does not overlap the bad sector information or any replacement sectors. The bad sector structure is as follows: struct dkbad { long bt_csn; /* cartridge serial number */ u_short bt_mbz; /* unused; should be 0 */ u_short bt_flag; /* -1 => alignment cartridge */ struct bt_bad { u_short bt_cyl; /* cylinder number of bad sector */ u_short bt_trksec; /* track and sector number */ } bt_bad[MAXBAD]; }; Unused slots in the bt_bad array are filled with all bits set, a putatively illegal value. MAXBAD (in <sys/dkbad.h>) may be tuned locally to reduce the space required to hold the bad-sector file in memory. It may not be greater than 126, which uses the whole disk sector. Bad sectors past MAXBAD may be included by the formatter, but replacement sectors will not be used until MAXBAD is increased. Bad144 is invoked by giving a device type (e.g. rk07, rm03, rm05, etc.), and a device name (e.g. hk0, hp1, etc.). It reads the first sec- tor of the last track of the corresponding disk and prints out the bad sector information. It may also be invoked giving a serial number for the pack and a list of bad sectors, and will then write the supplied information onto the same location. Note, however, that bad144 does not arrange for the specified sectors to be marked bad in this case. This option should only be used to restore known bad sector information which was destroyed. New bad sectors can be added by running the standard DEC formatter in section ``bad.'' SEE ALSO
badsect(8) BUGS
Not all drivers support bad-sector forwarding on the PDP-11. It should be possible to both format disks on-line under UNIX and to change the bad sector information, marking new bad sectors, without running a standalone program. The bootstrap drivers used to boot the system do not understand bad sectors or handle ECC errors. This means that none of these errors can occur when reading the file /unix to boot. Sector 0 of the disk drive and the file /boot in the root file system of that drive must also not have any of these errors in it. The drivers that write a system core image on disk after a crash do not handle errors; thus the crash dump area must be free of errors and bad sectors. 3rd Berkeley Distribution BAD144(8)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 11:58 AM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy