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System lost power in middle of rescue - could image be corrupt?
From: |
Shahrukh Merchant |
Subject: |
System lost power in middle of rescue - could image be corrupt? |
Date: |
Thu, 23 Apr 2020 12:51:54 -0300 |
I was imaging a (non-failed) internal drive to an external USB 3.0 hard drive
using
ddrescue -d -v /dev/sda imagefile mapfile
I know that if I abort this with Ctrl-C I can resume where I left off by
re-running the command with no problem since the program has a chance to
complete pending writes, etc., before stopping. But what if there is an abrupt
power-off with no warning (no hibernation, no suspend, just instant loss of
power to the computer and hence the external drive too)? No chance to complete
cached writes, certainly not to close file handles, much less unmount the
drive. I don't even know what the drive does in such cases with its internally
cached but unwritten data.
Since it was a 12 hour process for a 2 TB drive that was about 76% through, I
didn't want to restart it from scratch. Does ddrescue guarantee non-corruption
in these cases if I just restart it? Would it have made a difference if I
hadn't used the -d option for direct writes to the hard drive?
In this case I decided to use the mapfile.bak file the second time around,
since it had a 2 minutes earlier last-modified time than mapfile, so it was
cheap insurance, but was even that necessary?
Shahrukh
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