On 21.Okt.2013, at 17:11, Sureyya Sahin wrote: > > > On 21/10/13 05:07 AM, Curt wrote: >> On 2013-10-21, Bob Proulx <b...@proulx.com> wrote: >>> >>> Sureyya Sahin wrote: >>>> Just to update, the hdparm command gives me: >>>> Advanced power management level: 254 >>>> I guess the value would be 254. I will try to set it permanently if I can. >>> >>> Set it permanently to 254? Or to something different? >> >> My understanding is that he executed the command >> >> hdparm -I /dev/whatever >> >> and he got back an apm level of 254, which is what the device has >> defaulted to without any intervention on his part. >> >> > Yes, Curt I issued the command and ended up with some information including > the part I posted and I thought is relevant. I am interpreting this as > follows: > > Currently, with the data I already posted from the output of smart, I am > having a low value at around 35 perhaps. When I issue the hdparm command, I > am obtaining a value of 254 which would be the ideal one for my computer. > Thus, I will add the scripts described in the article to set it to 254 and to > relieve the symptom.
If the hdparm -I tells you that APM is at 254, then *it is* at 254 The value of 35 that you are talking about is another value that has nothing to do with it. you refer to this line ID# ATTRIBUTE_NAME FLAG VALUE WORST THRESH TYPE UPDATED WHEN_FAILED RAW_VALUE 193 Load_Cycle_Count 0x0032 035 035 000 Old_age Always - 656598 The last column is the raw value, probably this is the absolute load cycle count, but who knows. *If* the raw value is the absolute count, your disk had 656598 cycles VALUE and WORST are normalized views of the raw value. If VALUE is reaching THRESH than the disk will die soon. VALUE was probably 100 when the disk was new and was/is decreasing since then. If S.M.A.R.T. is right, you have 1 third of the load cycles left. Oh, but who says that it decreases linearly? I did a search for your drive (I hope I got that right) http://www.techhypermart.com/samsung-hm641ji-2-5-640gb-mobile-hard-disk-drive.html says - Load/Unload Cycles: 600,000 yours is at 656598, this could mean that its over the specificated load cycle counts yet. Note that this does not correlate with the 1 third from above, sadly. Another strange thing - your APM is at 254 according to the output from hdparm It was mentioned that the APM level is not guaranteed to survive a reboot. Some OS's could set it at boot time, some will not. It could be that a OS that does not make these clicking sounds is a OS that sets it at 254 at boot time. You will have to retrieve the value with the problem-os. Maybe you retrieved this value while the "good" OS was running, I do not know. I encountered drives which APM was not changeable at all Also note that the interpretation of the raw value is not standardized. We are fishing in muddy waters without technical specifications from Samsung. -- Markus -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-user-requ...@lists.debian.org with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact listmas...@lists.debian.org Archive: http://lists.debian.org/f8e6354f-8db4-4ae2-bc53-e9d5eb706...@gmail.com