On Wed, Jul 04, 2007 at 03:01:16PM +0200, Rodolfo Medina wrote: > A few days ago I by chance realized that the DVD-RW I had used for months to > do > may backup was probably damaged: apparently it was not, because I could burn > my > data onto it without problems; but when I tried to copy its content into a > hard > disk I got I/O errors and some directories could not be copied. > > The problem disappeared when I changed the DVD with a brand new one, but now I > feel not sure: how can I know when my actual backup DVD should in case be > damaged as well? Is there any tool for that? >
Look at cdck. The procedure I use is to verify the burn (I happen to use K3B which has a verify option) which calculates the md5sum of the image file and the CD/DVD and compares them. Then I use cdck to do finer-grained testing. Here's the readme for cdck: CD/DVD check tools ================== Actually cdck is a simple program to verify CD/DVD quality. The known fact is that even if all files on the disc are readable, some sectors having bad timing can easily turn into unreadable ones in the future. To get an idea about disc cdck reads it sector by sector, keeping all reading timings and then tells you its verdict. Optionally it can write timing table into text file usable by gnuplot(1) program, so you can draw some graphs out of it. -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]