SMART data consists only the count of remapped sectors, seek failures, raw read error rate, uncorrectable sector counts, crc errors etc., and technically one should be aware of the error during write operation as well. As per the ATAPI specifications, the media will report error for both read / write operations. It times out / sends out error code for both read and write operations. Correct me if I am wrong. What happens if all the available free sectors are remapped and there are no more sectors to map? In that atleast the drive should return an error right? When using the O_DIRECT more, the i/o error, media bad, softreset, hardreset error messages are starting to fill up dmesg almost immediately after the write call. It just tries in a continous loop and then finally returns success (even without remapping). I don't know how to change the behavior of libata / or other such driver which does it. All I want to do it to know the error in my program while it is reporting it in the syslog at kernel / driver level. Thank you. On Thu, Mar 4, 2010 at 12:49 PM, Mark Lord <kernel@xxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > On 03/04/10 10:33, foo saa wrote: > .. >> >> hdparm is good, but I don't want to use the internal ATA SECURE ERASE >> because I can never get the amount of bad sectors the drive had. > > .. > > Oh.. but isn't that information in the S.M.A.R.T. data ?? > > You'll not find the bad sectors by writing -- a true WRITE nearly never > reports a media error. Instead, the drive simply remaps to a good sector > on the fly and returns success. > > Generally, only READs report media errors. > > Cheers > -- To unsubscribe, send a message with 'unsubscribe linux-mm' in the body to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxx For more info on Linux MM, see: http://www.linux-mm.org/ . Don't email: <a href