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#351886 - 29/04/2012 17:44 Has my 2TB backup drive gone tits-up?
tanstaafl.
carpal tunnel

Registered: 08/07/1999
Posts: 5543
Loc: Ajijic, Mexico
This is complex to describe with lots of variables. I'll try to note everything without too much extraneous detail, but my apologies in advance if I'm on the wrong track.

My backup disk is in a Vantec external dock. This dock allows me to connect either with eSATA or USB.

I use a simple, basic backup program called Karen's Replicator to do my backups. All it does (as I have it configured) is make the backup drive look like the source drive, copying/deleting files as required. Let's not get into whether or not this is an optimal backup strategy; for my non-mission-critical data it suits my needs: I don't have old versions of files I might need to retrieve, and I rely on the Recycle Bin should I delete a file in error. Simplicity is my goal here.

There are 36,398 files on the source drive, each file about 52MB. My preference for backing up is eSATA. On my hardware, it runs about 4.5 times faster than the USB connection. However, sometimes my eSATA connection is unreliable. Most recently...

I ran a backup Saturday morning. Or at least, attempted to. As sometimes happens, the eSATA mode gave trouble, locking up the computer after about 80GB of transfer. Nothing short of a hard power-off reset will bring it back to life when this happens. No mouse, no keyboard, nothing except the power button on the tower case has any effect. I tried again with eSATA, same results. So I unplugged the eSATA cable on the external dock and plugged in the USB. A quick check with Windows Explorer to see how much data had been transferred showed the above mentioned 80GB. The remaining 1,767GB (yes, GB of data that used to be on that 1.81TB drive were just... gone.

I thought I would start up the Active@ Hard Disk Monitor program and look at the operating information for the hard drive(s), not that I would have understood much of it, but instead got a "Not Connected" error. (See screen shot.) Hunh? Could it be that I can't start that program after the computer is booted up, but must have it in my Startup menu instead?

Oh well, unpleasant surprise, but at least the source data, on an identical WD-20EARS 2TB drive was intact, so I started the backup again with USB. A day and a half later, it was finished. And the destination (i.e., backup) drive had about 73GB less data on it than the source drive. A check of the backup log showed that a big chunk of files right in the middle of the job couldn't be written to the destination drive for various reasons. Re-running the backup again generated a similar backup log. Several times re-attempting the backup it would lock up on the same file, the one shown at the beginning of the error list on the attached log. Just to be thorough, I decided to go ahead and lock up my computer again by connecting the destination drive to eSATA instead of USB. The computer went bonkers (technical term) the moment I turned on the power to the external dock. The "Start" menu would only show as long as I held the mouse button down. Windows Explorer would come up with a blank screen "Application not Responding". At least the keyboard worked, so I was able to kill the Explorer with Task Manager. So I gave up for the night.

Earlier I had tried different backup software (FBackup4) with similar results: After backing up some files it locked up the computer.

This morning just to be sure it was broken, I tried USB again, which is when I generated the attached log file. Because I am a masochist I thought I'd lock up the computer again with eSATA, figuring that maybe it would catch on fire or something and give a few more clues as to the problem. Instead it did something worse: it began backing up the missing files at 4.5x the USB speed, running perfectly, doing exactly what it was supposed to do. As I type this it is about 90% done copying over the missing files.

So, do I have a hardware problem? If so is it the hard drive, the Vantec dock, the cable connecting the dock to the back of the computer, the eSATA connection from motherboard to back of the tower case?

Would things be happier if I reformatted the hard drive and started over from scratch?

Is my backup software (which has worked quite satisfactorily for the last eight years or so) the culprit?

What should I do now?

Addendum: The backup finished, and depending on just which disk statistics I look at, it is either perfect or there is as much as 5GB discrepancy somewhere.

Attached is a very elaborate screenshot showing disk information after the backup. It is too big to display automatically with the post, so you'll have to open the attachment yourself. F: drive is on top, L: drive on the bottom. L: is the backup or destination drive. The gray data boxes are from left to right Properties of the whole Drive; Properties of all the folders in Root; and Properties of just the "Library" directory, as shown by Windows Explorer. The right half of the whole screenshot shows (you're way ahead of me here) the actual Explorer windows. In the lower right corner of the screenshot is a brief spreadsheet with all the pertinent data from the gray boxes, arranged in a compact and easier to read format.

According to Windows Explorer, of the three folders in the Root directory, two are empty ($Recycle Bin and System Volume Information) and the Library folder is the only one with data. I find it encouraging that the Library folders (green highlight) in the F: and the L: drives match exactly, both in number of bytes and in number of Folders/Files. This would suggest that the backup was successful.

However, I am puzzled by the discrepancies in overall disk statistics. At the Drive level (pink highlight), there is a difference of over five gigabytes between F: and L:. Some of this could be attributed to differences in fragmentation between the two drives... but not 5GB worth. The drive level stats don't tell how many folders/files there are. Pity...

At the Root level (yellow highlight), where everything in Root is highlighted then right-clicked for Properties, there is a 3.6GB difference between F: and L:. Also, F: shows 16 folders and 92 files more than L:, no doubt accounting for the 3.6GB difference. But what/where are those files? I have Windows Explorer configured to show hidden and system files, and there are none showing for either drive.

I realize I should just close my eyes and be thankful that my backups are done, but these kind of discrepancies upset me.

tanstaafl.


Attachments
Backup Log.rtf (102 downloads)
Active@.jpg

Disks Stats.jpg (104 downloads)

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#351887 - 29/04/2012 18:18 Re: Has my 2TB backup drive gone tits-up? [Re: tanstaafl.]
mlord
carpal tunnel

Registered: 29/08/2000
Posts: 14484
Loc: Canada
The S.M.A.R.T. data from the drive should tell if the problem is with the drive itself or not.

That's always step #1 with these things.

I was copying a few hundred GB of media files to a USB drive a few weeks ago -- the USB drive was formatted with NTFS. After the copy, and a "safe shutdown".. the next morning the drive was unreadable. Lost the 500GB of original contents plus the freshly copied stuff.

Had to recopy it all (again).
Not a hardware problem in this case, just an NTFS issue of some kind.

Cheers

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#351888 - 29/04/2012 19:04 Re: Has my 2TB backup drive gone tits-up? [Re: mlord]
tanstaafl.
carpal tunnel

Registered: 08/07/1999
Posts: 5543
Loc: Ajijic, Mexico
Originally Posted By: mlord
The S.M.A.R.T. data from the drive should tell if the problem is with the drive itself or not.
That was actually the first thing I thought I'd do. A screenshot that was supposed to be in the original post didn't load, I didn't notice it until now.

For whatever reason, my S.M.A.R.T. program won't start up. Maybe it has to be in the startup menu or something, rather than being loaded after the fact?

tanstaafl.


Attachments
Active@.jpg


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"There Ain't No Such Thing As A Free Lunch"

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#351890 - 29/04/2012 23:15 Re: Has my 2TB backup drive gone tits-up? [Re: tanstaafl.]
Shonky
pooh-bah

Registered: 12/01/2002
Posts: 2009
Loc: Brisbane, Australia
With respect to NTFS corrupting, I would say that's a pretty rare occurrence in my experience. It's generally pretty reliable.

But, I would definitely start with a format and I'd probably even consider a full format (just that it will take a while) to completely wipe it.

NTFS corruptions should not cause hard lockups either, so I would suspect hardware issues in turning causing FS issues.

If your eSATA is "unreliable" you really should exclude it from your backup process. You are just adding more risk. It sounds like maybe your backup dock hardware (maybe the power supply) could be the culprit.

Also, 1.5 days for 1800GB is kinda slow too. That's about 14MB/sec. With USB2.0 you should be a bit more like double that.
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#40104192 120Gb (no longer in my E36 M3, won't fit the E46 M3)

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#351894 - 30/04/2012 12:05 Re: Has my 2TB backup drive gone tits-up? [Re: Shonky]
drakino
carpal tunnel

Registered: 08/06/1999
Posts: 7868
It may go faster then 14MB/s over USB if the hard drive is plugged directly into the back of the computer (onto the root hub) instead of attached to one of the external hubs with devices both downstream and upstream.

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#351896 - 30/04/2012 12:43 Re: Has my 2TB backup drive gone tits-up? [Re: drakino]
mlord
carpal tunnel

Registered: 29/08/2000
Posts: 14484
Loc: Canada
There is no reason for eSATA to be any less reliable than the onboard SATA ports: eSATA == SATA, 100% except for the connector.

So perhaps that's a good place to focus attention. Exactly how does the external drive connect to the motherboard when using SATA ? What is the path of physical cables (and lengths) that is used?

As for diagnosing the drive, YOU REALLY MUST GET THE S.M.A.R.T. DATA!! Pardon the emphasis, but that is the first and FIRST step required. smile

If you cannot get it under MS-Windows, then boot from a Linux disc and get it from a terminal window with "smartctl -a /dev/sda".

Cheers

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#351897 - 30/04/2012 13:06 Re: Has my 2TB backup drive gone tits-up? [Re: mlord]
Dignan
carpal tunnel

Registered: 08/03/2000
Posts: 12318
Loc: Sterling, VA
Originally Posted By: mlord
There is no reason for eSATA to be any less reliable than the onboard SATA ports: eSATA == SATA, 100% except for the connector.

Tom was talking about USB, and plugging into a hub vs directly into the motherboard's rear ports. Doug was using eSATA, but tried USB when his problems began...
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#351898 - 30/04/2012 13:14 Re: Has my 2TB backup drive gone tits-up? [Re: Dignan]
mlord
carpal tunnel

Registered: 29/08/2000
Posts: 14484
Loc: Canada
Originally Posted By: Dignan
Doug was using eSATA, but tried USB when after his problems began...

Exactly (almost). Thus the trouble-shooting for the eSATA connection.


Edited by mlord (30/04/2012 13:15)

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#351899 - 30/04/2012 13:23 Re: Has my 2TB backup drive gone tits-up? [Re: tanstaafl.]
pca
old hand

Registered: 20/07/1999
Posts: 1102
Loc: UK
Hi.

You can easily get all sorts of useful drive information with Speedfan under windows.

I would suggest you may well have a cable fault. I have found sata connectors to be rather unreliable in the long term, I have at least one of them fail a year in one computer or other. One fairly common mode of failure is data corruption, rather than complete loss of functionality. This might explain your problems.

Does your Esata connector on the PCB come straight off the motherboard, of from a sata port via an internal sata to esata backplane connector?

pca
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Experience is what you get just after it would have helped...

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#351907 - 30/04/2012 20:16 Re: Has my 2TB backup drive gone tits-up? [Re: pca]
tanstaafl.
carpal tunnel

Registered: 08/07/1999
Posts: 5543
Loc: Ajijic, Mexico
Originally Posted By: pca
You can easily get all sorts of useful drive information with Speedfan under windows.
Thank you, Patrick!

After trying three different programs to monitor S.M.A.R.T, finally one that works on my computer.

Active@ said my hard drives were not connected.

WD SMART Test saw all of the drives, but would only display data for my System drive -- 80 GB IDE -- and said SMART data was not available for the other four drives.

PassMark would display SMART info for the system drive, not the others. [UPDATE: for whatever reason, it now works properly.] [UPDATE: No, it doesn't.]

SpeedFan works properly right out of the box. And embarassingly, I have had it installed for more than a year now, and had forgotten I had it.

Below are screenshots of the two monitor programs that worked. What does it all mean?

Originally Posted By: pca
I would suggest you may well have a cable fault. I have found sata connectors to be rather unreliable in the long term,
I will buy a new cable tomorrow.

Originally Posted By: pca
Does your Esata connector on the PCB come straight off the motherboard, of from a sata port via an internal sata to esata backplane connector?
Cable from motherboard to the inside part of a connector on the back of the computer; then another cable from the outside of the connector to my Vantec dock. I don't know if there are any electronics in the connector, probably not. I think the cable from the motherboard to the connector is integrated, i.e., not separate pieces.

tanstaafl.


Attachments
SpeedFan.jpg


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"There Ain't No Such Thing As A Free Lunch"

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#351909 - 30/04/2012 20:30 Re: Has my 2TB backup drive gone tits-up? [Re: mlord]
tanstaafl.
carpal tunnel

Registered: 08/07/1999
Posts: 5543
Loc: Ajijic, Mexico
Originally Posted By: mlord
As for diagnosing the drive, YOU REALLY MUST GET THE S.M.A.R.T. DATA!! Pardon the emphasis, but that is the first and FIRST step required.
Ummmm... I guess I whould have mentioned that I have had these symptoms with three different drives in that Vantec dock. Thinking about that, it is probably not a drive problem. More likely something with the dock itself, or even more likely, what Patrick suggested: a cable/connector problem.

tanstaafl.
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"There Ain't No Such Thing As A Free Lunch"

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#351914 - 01/05/2012 00:48 Re: Has my 2TB backup drive gone tits-up? [Re: tanstaafl.]
mlord
carpal tunnel

Registered: 29/08/2000
Posts: 14484
Loc: Canada
Yup. That kinda points to a cable/connector issue.
The internal bracket is probably good, though if you had a spare I'd say to switch to the spare.

The external cable is an eSATA cable -- different connectors on the ends than a regular SATA cable, so keep that in mind when hunting for a replacement.

If you don't have them locally, I could always send you a new cable set, but I dunno if that's worthwhile or not (borders).

Cheers

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#351915 - 01/05/2012 00:49 Re: Has my 2TB backup drive gone tits-up? [Re: mlord]
mlord
carpal tunnel

Registered: 29/08/2000
Posts: 14484
Loc: Canada
Oh, and the SMART data you posted looks fine. I got a chuckle out of the software lightly complaining that your drive spins up more quickly than spec.. thats a Good Thing, not a Bad Thing. smile

Unless, perhaps the power supply is over voltage..

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