Full physical hd check
I would like to run a full, sector-by-sector, physical check on some external hard drives. As far as I know,chkdsk
does not supply this option.
Is there a workaround under chkdsk
, or a good replacement? I'm using Windows 7 on this machine, but Linux solutions applicable from a live CD are also welcome.
Thanks,
Adam Matan
In Windows NT/XP/Vista/7, you can open a CMD prompt and use
chkdsk /r x:
where x is the drive letter of your USB drive, assuming the drive is partitioned and has a drive letter assigned to it.
I'd suggest getting an Ubuntu live CD and booting into Linux, then using badblocks to scan for physical defects.
Use sudo fdisk -l
to list all the drives and their partitions. For each drive:
sudo badblocks -nvs /dev/sdx
where your hard drive is /dev/sdx. This will perform a non-destructive read/write test on the disk without doing a filesystem check.
If you don't care about the data, you can do this instead, to do a more thorough scan:
sudo badblocks -wvs /dev/sdx
The -w option tells badblocks to write a known pattern, then read back the data to make sure it matches the pattern. It does this 4 times, using the patterns 0xaa, 0x55, 0xff, and 0x00 (alternating 0's and 1's, then all 1's, then all 0's). Note that this will overwrite all data on the drive and wipe out all the partitions, as well.
If you happen to have a Linux filesystem on the drive, you can check for filesystem errors and run badblocks at the same time. First, get the list of all the drives and their partitions:
sudo fdisk -l
Then for each partition:
sudo e2fsck -fcc /dev/sdx#
Again, /dev/sdx is the hard drive you want to scan. # is the number of the partition (e.g., /dev/sdb1). Specifying c twice will force fsck to run, and will use badblocks to do a non-destructive read-write test. If you just use the c option once, badblocks will do a read-only test.
I run badblocks -wvs on every new hard drive I purchase before putting it into service.
I would like to run a full, sector-by-sector, physical check on some external hard drives.
Download and run HD Tune, pick the drive you want to scan from the drop down menu, click the tab Error Scan (make sure the box Quick Scan is clear) and hit Start.
HD Tune is free for personal use and portable (no installation required).
Many drive manufactureers like Western Digital and Seagate provide tools that will do this kind of check. Usually a Windows tool.