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Erasing a 8.6 GB HD:
It takes about the same time as erasing a 3 TB HD.
Irony?
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Le 21/08/2012 15:15, Invisible a écrit :
> Erasing a 8.6 GB HD:
>
> It takes about the same time as erasing a 3 TB HD.
>
> Irony?
Same technology ? Interface ?
What do you mean by "erasing" ?
* removing the partition table
* overwriting the first few sectors with "dd if=/dev/null of=/dev/.. "
* formatting again the partiton
* overwriting the whole drive ?
Writing the whole 3 TB drive would take a few hours (at 50 to 100 MB/s,
I let you compute), if I trust the raid5 synchronisation on partitions
of 2TB that I observed.
The three former method are rather quick and might not have too much
impact by the disk size. (at worst, a few extra superblock to be written
along the disk)
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Invisible wrote:
> Erasing a 8.6 GB HD:
>
> It takes about the same time as erasing a 3 TB HD.
True, they both get crashed in few seconds/minutes, depending on
available equipment.
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> Same technology ? Interface ?
Both IDE. Vastly different manufacture dates, though.
And that's the thing. Newer drives are much faster, but also much
larger. So the erase time remains roughly constant.
> What do you mean by "erasing" ?
> * removing the partition table
That takes milliseconds on any system.
> * overwriting the whole drive ?
This.
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On 21/08/2012 02:15 PM, Invisible wrote:
> Erasing a 8.6 GB HD:
>
> It takes about the same time as erasing a 3 TB HD.
I take it back. The 8.6 GB drive is /still/ erasing...
I'm pretty sure that means I just have selected a non-optimal block size
or something, because there's no way it should be taking this long.
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Le 24/08/2012 09:53, Invisible a écrit :
> On 21/08/2012 02:15 PM, Invisible wrote:
>> Erasing a 8.6 GB HD:
>>
>> It takes about the same time as erasing a 3 TB HD.
>
> I take it back. The 8.6 GB drive is /still/ erasing...
>
> I'm pretty sure that means I just have selected a non-optimal block size
> or something, because there's no way it should be taking this long.
It might have bad blocks, and enters a retry loop... with I/O timeout.
My best erasor: unix "dd bs=32kB if=/dev/zero of=/dev/<drive> "
If you really bother, provide a count= (but it's in block...)
If SMART is available on the drive, check it.
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On 24/08/2012 10:48 AM, Le_Forgeron wrote:
> It might have bad blocks, and enters a retry loop... with I/O timeout.
No, I think it's just ancient. (The OS still loads, after all...)
> My best erasor: unix "dd bs=32kB if=/dev/zero of=/dev/<drive> "
Yeah, that's what I'm using. But with a 0.5 KB block size. For some
reason, each block takes about 10 seconds...
I just tried changing it to 8 KB. Let's see if that makes any difference
at all...
> If SMART is available on the drive, check it.
The drive is 8.6 GB. How ancient must that thing be? I doubt SMART was
even invented back then...
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