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  2. Self-Monitoring, Analysis and Reporting Technology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Self-Monitoring,_Analysis...

    Delta between most-worn and least-worn Flash blocks. It describes how good/bad the wearleveling of the SSD works on a more technical way. 178 0xB2: Used Reserved Block Count "Pre-Fail" attribute used at least in Samsung devices. 179 0xB3: Used Reserved Block Count Total "Pre-Fail" attribute used at least in Samsung devices. [52] 180 0xB4

  3. badblocks - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Badblocks

    A more common use case is the invocation of badblocks as part of e2fsck when passing the option "-c" to scan for bad blocks and prevent data from being stored on these blocks. This is done by adding the list of found bad blocks to the bad block inode to prevent the affected sectors from being allocated to a file or directory.

  4. Data scrubbing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Data_scrubbing

    As a copy-on-write (CoW) file system for Linux, Btrfs provides fault isolation, corruption detection and correction, and file-system scrubbing. If the file system detects a checksum mismatch while reading a block, it first tries to obtain (or create) a good copy of this block from another device – if its internal mirroring or RAID techniques are in use.

  5. SpinRite - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SpinRite

    In episode 338 Gibson clarified "it is actually detrimental because [solid-state drives] don't like to be written", but also pointing out that a read-only run could be beneficial: "SpinRite's Level 1 is a read-only scan, and doing that on an SSD makes a lot of sense.

  6. ddrescue - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ddrescue

    GNU ddrescue is a data recovery tool for disk drives, DVDs, CDs, and other digital storage media.It copies raw blocks of storage, such as disk sectors, from one device or file to another, while handling read errors in an intelligent manner to minimize data loss by scraping good sectors from partially read blocks.

  7. Bad sector - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bad_sector

    A bad sector in computing is a disk sector on a disk storage unit that is unreadable. Upon taking damage, all information stored on that sector is lost. When a bad sector is found and marked, the operating system like Windows or Linux will skip it in the future. Bad sectors are a threat to information security in the sense of data remanence.

  8. AOL Help

    help.aol.com

    Get answers to your AOL Mail, login, Desktop Gold, AOL app, password and subscription questions. Find the support options to contact customer care by email, chat, or phone number.

  9. Wear leveling - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wear_leveling

    The first type of wear leveling is called dynamic wear leveling and it uses a map to link logical block addresses (LBAs) from the OS to the physical flash memory. Each time the OS writes replacement data, the map is updated so the original physical block is marked as invalid data, and a new block is linked to that map entry. Each time a block ...