Error Bad Crc
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41 Last updated: 28 Oct, 2014 Print Email to friend Views: 114065 About CRC Errors A CRC error indicates that some data in your Zip file (.zip or .zipx) is damaged. CRC stands bad crc on ms5611 for cyclic redundancy check. It is a calculation made from all the data
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in a file to insure accuracy. When you add a file to a Zip file, WinZip calculates a CRC value for
Bad Crc Received
the file and saves the value in the Zip file. When you later extract the file from the Zip file, WinZip calculates the CRC of the extracted file and compares it to the value
Bad Crc Using Default Environment
stored when the file was zipped. If these two CRC values do not match, the file that was extracted does not match the original file, and WinZip will display a CRC Error message. When the data in a Zip file is damaged, it may not be possible to extract all of the files from the Zip file correctly. Damaged data can affect the entire Zip file, multiple files, bad crc unzip or just one file. Why CRC Errors Occur There are many possible causes for data damage. Among the most common is a transfer error when downloading a Zip file from the internet. Such an error can introduce invalid data into a Zip file. Some other possible causes include exposure of media to excessive temperatures or magnetic fields, cross linked disk sectors, and mechanical problems with disk drives. What to do if a CRC Error Occurs The best solution to the problem of a damaged Zip file is to try to obtain another copy of the file. For example, use your backup copy of the file or get a new copy from the original source. If you obtained the Zip file by downloading it, then downloading it again will almost always solve the problem. A "Last Resort" for CRC Errors If you cannot download a new copy of the Zip file, obtain a replacement disk, or use a backup copy, you may still be able to recover some of your files, and even save portions of the files that are damaged in the Zip file. Here is the recommended procedure. Start WinZip and open the damaged Zip file Use the current available m
Registered: 2011-05-29 Posts: 261 Bad CRC when unzip-ing large file Hi. I downloaded a bunch of .zip files and I'm trying to unzip them viaunzip filename.zipIt works fine on all the files except fw_printenv bad crc for one. It's the largest of the bunch at about 120M. When uboot bad crc I try to unzip it, I get thisbad CRC 41041f89 (should be f5255afc)File-roller chokes too, but I'm guessing that it's ubifs_check_node bad crc just calling unzip behind the scenes.BUT....If I unzip it in windows using WinRAR, it works fine.I've read that unzip commonly chokes on large files, but also that it would be fixed in http://kb.winzip.com/kb/entry/41/ version 6.0. But this file isn't even THAT big. Anyone know what might be going wrong? Maybe some options might help? Offline #2 2012-11-15 18:28:47 Lord Bo Member Registered: 2012-11-11 Posts: 151 Re: Bad CRC when unzip-ing large file Pacopag wrote:bad CRC 41041f89 (should be f5255afc)This tells you, that the Cyclic Redundancy Check for this file failed. And that means, that the file is corrupted. https://bbs.archlinux.org/viewtopic.php?id=153011 Either it got corrupted whilst it was tranferred from the remote server to you, or it was already corrupted on the server. You have to download it a second time. If it still says that the CRC is 41041f89, the file was alredy in corrupt state stored on the server. Last edited by Lord Bo (2012-11-15 18:31:19) Offline #3 2012-11-15 18:37:58 Lord Bo Member Registered: 2012-11-11 Posts: 151 Re: Bad CRC when unzip-ing large file Pacopag wrote:BUT....If I unzip it in windows using WinRAR, it works fine.Well, ok, I overread this. This could mean that there is an error with the unzip command, but I rather guess, that WinRAR did unpack the file, though there were errors (maybe was even able to correct them). I don't know, if that is possible with unzip, too, read the man page. Offline #4 2012-11-15 18:41:55 Lekensteyn Member From: Netherlands Registered: 2012-06-19 Posts: 181 Website Re: Bad CRC when unzip-ing large file Such errors do also occur when you have bad RAM. I suggest you to run memtest. Offline #5 2012-11-15 19:40:33 Pacopag Member Registered: 2011-05-29 Posts: 261 Re: Bad CRC when unzip-ing large file Unz
errors on large files Issues related to applications and software problems Post Reply Print view Search Advanced search 13 posts 1 2 http://www.centos.org/forums/viewtopic.php?t=5451 Next Nagle Posts: 16 Joined: 2012/03/17 19:43:41 Contact: Contact Nagle Website https://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/ms857313.aspx "unzip" reporting CRC errors on large files Quote Postby Nagle » 2012/03/17 20:34:34 "unzip" on a CentOS server ("CentOS release 6.2 (Final)", kernel "2.6.32-220.2.1.el6.x86_64") is reporting CRC errors on a 1.2GB file I created using Windows File Manager. Each file in the archive is over 300MB. The bad crc output reads:$ unzip infotsql.zipArchive: infotsql.zip inflating: us13_10-comps10.sql bad CRC b8fc8f29 (should be c999d7a7) inflating: us13_1-comps1.sql bad CRC ca1007a9 (should be e9b1dfe4) inflating: us13_2-comps2.sql bad CRC 288743e9 (should be efbf6d34) inflating: us13_3-comps3.sql inflating: us13_4-comps4.sql inflating: us13_5-comps5.sql bad CRC d5a09cbb (should be c28b50a7) inflating: us13_6-comps6.sql inflating: us13_7-comps7.sql bad CRC 63edd6c6 (should be 7dff5c8f) inflating: us13_8-comps8.sql inflating: us13_9-comps9.sql bad CRC 3b1847a4 error bad crc (should be 5984099a)I first thought the problem was a corrupted ZIP file. But it's not. I transferred the file back from the CentOS machine to the Windows machine (using FileZilla in "sftp" mode), and compared it with the original using "COMP":>compName of first file to compare: infotsql.zipName of second file to compare: infotsql\badcrc\infotsql.zipOption:Comparing infotsql.zip and infotsql\badcrc\infotsql.zip...Files compare OKSo, after a round-trip through SFTP to and from the server, the files match bit for bit. The file was NOT corrupted during transfer.Back on the Windows machine, I run the "test" function of 7-Zip on both (identical) versions of the file. Z-Zip reports no problems. So the file has valid CRCs.Just to be thorough, I decompress the file again on the CentOS machine. The output is exactly the same. So it's not an intermittent hardware error. I also run "memtest" for an hour to check the server's memory. It finds no problems.Having eliminated the possibility of file corruption, I have to now look for problems with "unzip". There are several "large file" bugs reporte
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