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Monitor Your Audio Drives for Trouble via SMART, Free (Windows/Mac/Linux)
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07-08-2008, 02:28 AM
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VawSwaspamups
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Monitor Your Audio Drives for Trouble via SMART, Free (Windows/Mac/Linux)
We live and die by hard drives for music. There’s no substitute for redundancy and backups (hey, you could be Matthew Dear and have a drive
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). But it is helpful to know whether a drive is healthy or not.
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built into drives can help.
</p> </p> Lifehacker today points to a free Windows utility for the job called
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:
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But that got me thinking about other tools. There’s quite a range of choices for Mac, Windows, Linux, and even some obscure operating systems. The only bad news: generally you’ll only be able to monitor internal drives, unless your external drive is eSATA rather than USB or FireWire. (eSATA is where I’d like to go generally – it’s quite a lot faster, and frees up your USB and FireWire buses for other things — but that’s a discussion for another day.)
Cross-platform / Linux
The
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package is a powerful ATA/ATAPI/SATA monitoring tool that runs on – well, pretty much everything. There’s a Windows package, plus a *nix version for Mac, Linux, BSD, Cygwin on Windows, Solaris, OS/2, QNX, and so on. This looks like your best choice on Linux.
Mac OS X
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(pictured at top) is probably the friendliest way to get at SMART data for SATA, ATA, and eSATA drives on the Mac. It even includes a handy menu bar item so you can monitor how your drive is doing at a glance. It’s free via Open Source “MIT License.”
You can also use the
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, via something like this:
diskutil info disk0 | grep SMART
</p> </p> </p> </p> </p> </p> </p> </p>
Windows
In addition to CrystalDiskInfo, you have a number of options:
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is a general-purpose monitoring and management tool for just about everything, including (as the name implies) fans.
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is a hard disk-only monitoring tool, like the others here. One thing it has going for it: friendly feedback and tidy tabs to view it.
More Information
The good folks at SpeedFan have an article on
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and how to interpret data you get – well worth reading whether or not you’re a SpeedFan user.
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