I O Error On Sector Easy Recovery
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my OS using an image file created by drive image due to my primary disk reporting a SMART error. I promoted my secondary disk to primary, did a quick NTFS format and installed the image.
Hard Drive Io Error Repair
All seemed ok until i created new image, which reported errors at LBA 10,704,656 Data i/o device error hard drive recovery error (cyclic redundency check) I got around this by instructind drive image to ignore bad sectors. However Easy recovery reports I/O errors at
How To Recover Data From I/o Device Error
Sectors 10705466, 10706246 and 10706251. I have run chkdsk /f but it did not find any problems. Easy recovery also crashes when carrying out a partition test. Can anyone advise on a way (a free program maybe) of i o device error external hard drive western digital repairing Disk I/O errors and correcting the bad sectors, or do i have to do a complete full reformat and start again? Regards Martin Mystical, Aug 22, 2004 #1 Advertisements Ralph Mowery Guest > I promoted my secondary disk to primary, did a quick NTFS format and > installed the image. All seemed ok until i created new image, which > reported errors at LBA 10,704,656 Data error (cyclic redundency check) > > I got around how to fix i/o device errors step-by-step this by instructind drive image to ignore bad sectors. > However Easy recovery reports I/O errors at Sectors 10705466, 10706246 > and 10706251. > > I have run chkdsk /f but it did not find any problems. Easy recovery > also crashes when carrying out a partition test. > > Can anyone advise on a way (a free program maybe) of repairing Disk I/O > errors and correcting the bad sectors, or do i have to do a complete > full reformat and start again? Looks like you are going to have to buy a new drive. When a drive starts reporting bad sectors it is usually all over. Ralph Mowery, Aug 22, 2004 #2 Advertisements DaveW Guest Bad sectors are portions of the disk that have FAILED. You cannot fix them; you buy a new harddrive. -- DaveW "Mystical" <> wrote in message news:... > I recently had to reinstall my OS using an image file created by drive > image due to my primary disk reporting a SMART error. > > I promoted my secondary disk to primary, did a quick NTFS format and > installed the image. All seemed ok until i created new image, which > reported errors at LBA 10,704,656 Data error (cyclic redundency check) > > I got around this by instructind drive image to ignore bad sectors. > Howe
I/O Errors preventing access to full folders? SineSpeJune 14th, 2013, 06:01 PMSo I just recently had my computer's harddrive crap out on me in the process of trying to relocate my files to an external harddrive. Since i
How To Fix I/o Device Error Usb Drive
cannot boot Win 7 from my HDD, I'm using Xubuntu 12.10 from a CD to boot. i o device error windows 10 When trying to move my files to an external hard drive, i receive the error "Error when getting information for file '/media/...xxx.mp3' (or whatever
The Request Could Not Be Performed Because Of An I/o Device Error External Hard Drive
the file happens to be) and it's detailed as an "Input/output error." There's no doubt that this is due to bad sectors on the disk. When commanding dmesg, i receive: end_request: I/O error, dev sda, sector 50748707 Buffer I/O error http://www.pcreview.co.uk/threads/how-to-fix-disk-i-o-and-bad-sector-errors-help-pls.2017086/ on device sda3, logical block 2493348 ata1: EH complete Thing is, these bad sectors are also preventing me from opening folders. If i try to open a folder with a bad document directly in it (not in a subfolder), an error message displays "Failed to open directory "Folder" and it's because of the bad file. I need a way to get into these folders to transfer all the files that aren't effected by the bad sectors. My second goal is to https://ubuntuforums.org/archive/index.php/t-2154401.html repair the damaged files if necessary. I've already created and saved a 278GB image.dd using Testdisk onto my 1TB external. I was told i could go back to this if anything were to go wrong when trying to repair the original files. However, after completing the image, i received: Image created successfully but read errors have occurred. What are the next steps i should take? The only thing i can think of is running a chkdsk on the original harddrive, but i'm still hesitant as to how to go about doing this. If there's anymore information you need, let me know. My vocabulary with this stuff is pretty limited. NikThJune 14th, 2013, 06:15 PMSo this is a NTFS filesystem partition, correct ? A Windows partition. Well, would be better to run chkdsk from a Windows machine to correct the NTFS filesystem. Also a Linux utility exist to correct NTFS filesystems , but I would be trust more the MS tool for such job. But if you want to try, the utility's name is ntfs-3g. sudo apt-get install ntfs-3g sudo ntfsfix /dev/sd?? Where ? , replace it with the drive letter and partition letter. (e.g /dev/sda2) You can find drive letter and partition letter with sudo fdisk -l you will see the HPFS/NTFS filesystem. Again, better would be to boot from a Windows CD/DVD and try to correct the filesytem with chkdsk . Thanks SineSpeJune 14th, 2013, 07:17 PMNow
from a friends computer - a Seagate 120gig. He reports it was starting Windows XP then getting BSOD error. A boot in safe mode shows that it was stopping on mup.sys. Anyway we put the HDD in my PC to copy the data, but my PC says drive http://www.computerbanter.com/archive/index.php?t-117690.html is not formatted, format now? So we had a look at the HDD with OnTrack Easy Recovery http://rabexc.org/posts/recovering-from-failed-ssd and got back most of the important data. A full scan shows I/O Error on Sector. My question is whats the best thing to do with this HDD from here? Throw it, chkdsk it? format? what? Cheers -Al Arno WagnerJanuary 3rd 07, 01:41 PMPreviously wrote: > Could someone please give me some advice. > I have got a SATA HDD from a friends computer - a Seagate 120gig. He > device error reports it was starting Windows XP then getting BSOD error. > A boot in safe mode shows that it was stopping on mup.sys. > Anyway we put the HDD in my PC to copy the data, but my PC says drive > is not formatted, format now? > So we had a look at the HDD with OnTrack Easy Recovery and got back > most of the important data. A full scan shows I/O Error on Sector. > My question is whats the best thing to do o device error with this HDD from here? > Throw it, chkdsk it? format? what? Run a lobg SMART selftest and then look at the results (new SMART status of the disk). THe occasional (rare) bad sector is a possibility on modern disks, even wehen they are working fine. Only if you get other warning signs or more bad secors, then this is a problem (i.e. warrantly replacement or disposal issue). Arno Rod SpeedJanuary 3rd 07, 07:25 PM wrote: > Could someone please give me some advice. > > I have got a SATA HDD from a friends computer - a Seagate 120gig. He > reports it was starting Windows XP then getting BSOD error. > > A boot in safe mode shows that it was stopping on mup.sys. > > Anyway we put the HDD in my PC to copy the data, but my PC says drive > is not formatted, format now? > > So we had a look at the HDD with OnTrack Easy Recovery and got back > most of the important data. A full scan shows I/O Error on Sector. > My question is whats the best thing to do with this HDD from here? Post the Everest SMART report on the drive. http://www.majorgeeks.com/download.php?det=4181 Depending on what that shows, run the hard drive manufacturer's diagnostic on the drive and have it reallocate the bad sector if there is only one or two pending reallocated sectors. If its got lots of reallocated sectors, bin it. > Throw it, chkdsk it? format? what? vBulletin v3.6.4, Copyright ©2000-2016, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
the spinning disks! And hail the SSDs! That's about what happened the last time I upgraded my laptop. SSDs were just so much faster, energy efficient, and quieter that I couldn't stand the thought of remaining loyal to the trustful spinning disks. So... I just said goodbye to a few hundred dollars to welcome a Corsair Force GS on my laptop, and been happy ever after. Or so I thought. Back to the hard reality: last week my linux kernel started spewing read errors at my face, and here is a tale of what I had to do in order to bring my SSD back to life. The Symptoms It all started on a Friday morning with me running an apt-get install randomapp on my system. The command failed with an error similar to: # apt-get install random-app-whatever-it-was ... (Reading database ... dpkg: error processing whatever.deb (--install): dpkg: unrecoverable fatal error, aborting: reading files list for package 'libglib2.0-data': Input/output error E: Sub-process /usr/bin/dpkg returned an error code (2) where libglib.20-data had nothing to do with what I was trying to install. Fear pervaded, and next thing I did was run dmesg to see if the kernel had anything to say about the problem: # dmesg .... [1841.216697] end_request: I/O error, dev sda, sector 5246153 ... and sure enough, here it was. Trying to read the accused file surely returned Input/Output error: # cat /var/lib/dpkg/info/libglib2.0-data.list ... Input/output error Luckily enough, most of the system was still accessible and usable, so it couldn't be so bad after all, or could it? One more backup I was commuting to work when this happened, and didn't have with me anything I could use for a backup. So, I did the only thing I could reasonably do: put the laptop in suspend to RAM, back in my backpack, and hope it would survive until I got home. Once home, I resumed it from RAM (which worked without issues), and did one more backup with rsync (to copy all the files), and dd (to have an image of the partit