this time from Amazon
Where did you buy the fake drive?
To test flash drives you can use f3 or h2testw.
For 128GB it is probably a good idea to use f3probe as it is much faster
this time from Amazon
Where did you buy the fake drive?
To test flash drives you can use f3 or h2testw.
For 128GB it is probably a good idea to use f3probe as it is much faster
Where did you buy the fake drive?
To test flash drives you can use f3 or h2testw.
For 128GB it is probably a good idea to use f3probe as it is much faster
In a domestic ebaylike site.
Well, I tested it already. I started with f3, but since it was taking too long in an Atom netbook, I changed to h2testw in a i5 Windows PC, and it still took forever!
Warning: Only 127973 of 127993 MByte tested.
The media is likely to be defective.
53.5 GByte OK (112226640 sectors)
71.4 GByte DATA LOST (149862064 sectors)
Details:398.9 MByte overwritten (817040 sectors)
0 KByte slightly changed (< 8 bit/sector, 0 sectors)
71.0 GByte corrupted (149045024 sectors)
378.3 MByte aliased memory (774800 sectors)
First error at offset: 0x00000004f7f40000
Expected: 0x00000004f7f40000
Found: 0x0000000512f40000
H2testw version 1.3
Reading speed: 19.1 MByte/s
H2testw v1.4
Alles anzeigen
Best regards.
The new drive arived today, sooner than expected. I plugued it, performed a wipe out, and created an EXT4 filesystem, an then a shared folder to fulfill the plugin requirements. The backup is being made as I type.
BTW, can someone explain why there is Brazilian Portuguese insertions in my OMV install? According my memory, I do choose US English during the system install.
Best regards.
Bullseye! I thought the GUI language was chosen on the login screen.
Yesterday while trying to fix this language issue I blew the minidnla plugin. The fact is that I realized that my souces.list pointed to a repository of a Brazilian university, and that was the source of this edition. So I did the following:
- edited sources.list, changing all repositories in the list to http://deb.debian.org/debian or http://deb.debian.org/debian-security;
- disabled the minidnla plugin in OMV GUI;
- deleted the shared folder in OMV GUI;
- uninstalled the minidnla plugin in OMV GUI;
- updated the packages list in the CLI;
- updated the available packages in the CLI;
- reinstalled the minidnla plugin in the OMV GUI;
- added the shared folder in OMV GUI;
- re-enabled the minidnla plugin in the OMV GUI;
After that, the plugin didn't work anymore. I tried reversing what I have done, but so far I didn´t got a better result.
Best regards.
Well, I just finished my first rsync backup and now I fell much less woried as there is ONE copy of my data. But I don't feel the rsync process is practical for me. I would rather use a system that backup my data everytime I plug a particular drive in the server. Is there such a system? Is it reliable as rsync?
Best regards.
I would rather use a system that backup my data everytime I plug a particular drive in the server. Is there such a system? Is it reliable as rsync?
In the Plugins tab of OMV:
I’m sorry but I’ve never used it, but I see considerable discussion about it, and I’ve never seen any horror stories.
I’m sorry but I’ve never used it, but I see considerable discussion about it, and I’ve never seen any horror stories.
I will give it a try, then. Thank you, Agricola.
Best regards.
Sie haben noch kein Benutzerkonto auf unserer Seite? Registrieren Sie sich kostenlos und nehmen Sie an unserer Community teil!