Ist die CD im Eimer oder bin ich nur zu doof um sie zu lesen? Eine einfache CD kann einen so ziemlich zur Verzweiflung treiben – vorallem wenn es sich dabei um nur teilweise lesbare CDs handelt. Wie testet man eine CD am Besten? Eine kleine Suche brachte mich zum Tool readcd.
# readcd -c2scan dev=/dev/cdrom
Read speed: 4234 kB/s (CD 24x, DVD 3x).
Write speed: 4234 kB/s (CD 24x, DVD 3x).
Capacity: 353867 Blocks = 707734 kBytes = 691 MBytes = 724 prMB
Sectorsize: 2048 Bytes
Copy from SCSI (0,0,0) disk to file ‘/dev/null’
end: 353867
addr: 353867 cnt: 38
Time total: 519.971sec
Read 914386.80 kB at 1758.5 kB/sec.
Total of 0 hard read errors.
C2 errors total: 0 bytes in 0 sectors on disk
C2 errors rate: 0.000000%
C2 errors on worst sector: 0, sectors with 100+ C2 errors: 0
#
Master Of Disaster says:
Wenn du so was auch für DVDs brauchst, schau dir mal dvdisaster an.
LG
Robert
George Wyche says:
VERIFICATION OF BURNED DATA
Can the use of f= followed by getting an md5 checksum on to compare against an md5 on the original iso image be done?
Then one could be convinced that the information on the CD matches what one wanted to be on there.
Is there another way? Can we always assume a match with a C2 errors rate of 0.000000%? With many C2 errors, but no harderrors, is the above still true?