Friday, 25 January 2013

DiskCheckup: get warnings before a hard disk drive fails


DiskCheckup: get warnings before a hard disk drive fails

By  on August 17, 2012 - Tags:
A failing hard disk drive can have severe consequences for the data that is stored on the drive. In the worst case, you end up with an unusable hard drive and data loss that even the best recovery programs can’t restore.  While backup software can prevent data loss from happening in the first place, you may also appreciate warnings before a hard disk drive connected to your computer fails.
One of the programs that you can use for the job is DiskCheckup, a free for personal use disk monitoring software for the Windows operating system.
hard drive monitoring
The program displays all hard disk drives in its interface on startup. The lower half of the screen gets populated with information once you select one of the drives at the top. Information are sorted into the following four tabs:
  • Device Info lists the capacity, interface, model number, firmware and other device related information including the drive’s standards compliance.
  • SMART Info displays information about the health of a drive. Here you find information about the current and worst temperature, or error rates, and status information for each value that informs you if the drive is still running within limits.
  • SMART History is deactivated by default. You first need to activate the feature in the program settings. Please note that the data file can grow significantly in size. It is therefor suggested to only activate this feature temporarily.
  • Disk Self Test offers to run a short or extended test and displays the status of that test afterwards.
You need to enable the warning system with a click on the configuration button. Here you can define a temperature warning level, and configure whether you’d like to see a message window or receive an email when values exceed the threshold.
You need at least one hard drive with SMART functionality to use the program, and need to know that drives connected via SCSI or hardware RAID are not supported.

No comments:

Post a Comment