Quote:
Originally Posted by HanSooloo
Just to make sure, when you are in the Linux side of PS3, the hypervisor will ONLY give access to the Linux formatted part of the hdd, and NOT the full 60GB (or whatever the size of the hdd). So, when you are running the program ON the PS3 Linux, you are not really scanning the full hdd.
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Indeed - that's why I have one HDD as a system one (from which the PS3 is booting) and another one connected via USB adaptor - sorry for not stating that but I supposed it would be clear from SDF device (other of course it would be SDA) ... :smilew
I'm pretty sure it is scanning the whole hard drive as far as results are the same like from other PC using the live distro.
Quote:
Originally Posted by HanSooloo
Just for that, I got a 2.5" SATA to USB2 adaptor and have always scanned the hdd from a LiveCD Linux distro on CDROM or a USB stick. Pentoo Live CD 2006.1 is the best out there; can fit on a 256MB stick and will give you 5 to 6 MB empty space as well :smilew
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Yep - done all that - I have USB to IDE, USB to SATA, SATA to IDE, PCMCI to IDE, IDE 3.5" to IDE 2.5, IDE to Compact Flash and plenty of others.
Quote:
Originally Posted by HanSooloo
Here are some comments:
I wouldn't use scan hdd on the PS3 itself, since the hypervisor will only "expose" the Linux part of the hdd to you and NOT the whole hdd. It is a better idea to take the hdd and plug it to your PC with a 2.5" SATA to USB2 cable; boot your PC with a LiveCD Linux distro (Pentoo Live is the best choice in my opinion); and then run the scan hdd program on the harddisk.
I would ask you to do the following:- Make sure you are running Linux on a PC and not the PS3
- Start with the smallest of the hdds
- Zero the hdd using the "dd" command I posted before
- Run scan hdd program using the defaults
- Label the "results.txt" file with the size of the hdd (e.g.; results.60gb.txt)
- Post the results :smile2
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1. As explained above - doesn't matter (indeed as far as the system disk is not the scanned one).
2. OK
3. Indeed.
4. OK
5. Will do.
6 Ditto.
Just to explain my setup here - I've used a (slightly modified) SATA data + power backplate to feed the internal sata sockets out of the PS3 so now I can easily swap hard drive almost instantly without fidling with the cage, screws and cover all the time. It also allows me to attach 3.5" drives as well (thus I can go up to 750 GB at the moment) as wel as use IDE drives via SATA to IDE adaptor. So in theory I can try even some ridiculous sizes like 2.1 GB etc. ... :grin:
Quote:
Originally Posted by HanSooloo
The definition of "freshly installed" is as follows:- Go to System Settings and choose Restore to Factory Defaults.
- When the "Press X to restart" prompt comes on, press and hold the power button to power off the PS3.
The idea here is that the HDD data does not contain ANY customization / personalization and is as generic as it gets.
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I don't think there is any customization written to the disk related to the system seting - at least not until first reboot after initialization of the disk. It's a bit pain to re-set evrytime all the settings ...
I might be indeed indeed mistaken but I'll try to verify that tonight.
What I'd suggest instead is:
1. Put the wiped / zeroed disk in
2. Switch on the PS3.
3. Confirm initialization / formating of the drive.
4. At the prompt after formating to press x to reboot switch off the PS3 by holding the power button. (I was also thinking about using the power switch because the PS3 is apparentlyu accessing the disk before power down but I'll try to verify if any changes are made ...)
There is definitely something happening to teh disk AFTER the first reboot - also please see bellow attached result and comment.
OK - I've done - maybe more for a laugh (but I personally believe that could be the "way in") some test with one of my smallest hard drives - only 3.2 GB ... :eek2
After initializing by PS3 it shows capacity of 3098 MB with 896 MB free ...
I've done scan for:
1. Zeroed disk (which - BIG surprise - is ... well zeroed :grin

2. Initialized disk (with PS3 NOT reset to defaults) but without rebout after initialization.
3. Initialized disk (with PS3 NOT reset to defaults) with rebout after initialization.
What I think might be usefull is to fill up those 896 available MBs with some predefined AV files and see what will show up in the images.
ALso - HanSooloo - if you want I can do full images of 3.2 GB drive with all possible "combinations" of initializing so you can have a look by yourself. Just let me know.