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is the allocation of the bad sectors of the hdd to prevent data from being saved in these sectors something only from chkdsk and not from hdd? only manually?
This has been repeatedly explained to you.if i don't manually run chkdsk not repair will the bad sectors receive the files and corrupt them? chkdsk is the only protection to prevent data from being written to the HDD in this case?
HDD, don't use a CRC on blocks of data they use reed solomon encoding so the can correct errors during reads. If I still remember correctly SMART actually uses that RS ECC data to help determine if there are sectors that are beginning to exhibit abnormal number of ECC corrections on the data read. If you read up on HDD magnetic technology you'll be somewhat amazed we can rely on such a unreliable medium for storage it's all the coding that goes into sticking those bits on the drive that gives it any sort of reliability.the drive electronics calculates a CRC from the bit stream and also stores that in the block. It then reads it back, re-calculating the CRC from the data and comparing it with the CRC it saved. If they are different it will tell you there is an error straight away. The chances of bad data being written and a matching bad CRC being checked is extremely unlikely, I'm no mathematician but the probability is trillions to one.
If you have unrecognized bad sectors then anything written to those sectors will be corrupted due to a bad write operation. I'm pretty sure Windows does not perform a verify on written data, that is why if you download something you should hopefully have the md5 or sha1 sum so that you can verify the download is correct. Running it on the file will compute the sum again and if any corrupted reads occur due to a bad sector the sum won't match and then it might be worth doing a chkdsk as you may have found a bad sector that isn't marked.If someone does not know the manual command chkdsk and that person's HDD has bad sectors then will the downloaded and transferred files be written to those bad sectors of the HDD?
SMART monitors a drive for errors and ECC being performed during drive reads. Statistics are computed on those reads to determine if a drive is beginning to exhibit too many read errors that need to be corrected. This has nothing to do with whether you write to a given sector or not.without running chkdsk does the smart present in hdd solve and block the bad sectors from receiving files?
Probably they don't know about CHKDSK because they haven't had a problem.Many people are unaware of chkdsk so these people are going to have problems with bad sectors not allocated and separated?
Probably they don't know about CHKDSK because they haven't had a problem.
Usually if you have file system corruption and file read errors the OS will report that you should run CHKDSK to find and fix the problems. At least the last time I had to run it on a WIndows 7 Pro machine it found a few file system issues (no bad sectors) due to a crash that required a hard reset to reboot the PC. Haven't seen anything like that on my Windows 10 PCs yet. The system actually suggested that CHKDSK be run as it was booting and I think it even offered to do it by hitting space or return or that hit any key request. Don't remember the exact message it's been 8+ years when it last happened.g
Please answer my question...
Why are you so obsessed about data integrity and data retention? You are exhibiting signs of paranoia about it based on what you've posted so far.
Definitions I like to use with others:disk controller = HDD card, software driver = HDD firmware ???
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