Puzzled by smart test result of a hard drive


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My 2011 mac mini has been acting up lately (i.e. not rebooting correctly and generally being a PITA).  I did a repair permissions and verify disk and also did a smart test.  But I am confused by the results.

 

 

What does the remaining percentage mean?  Is the hard drive almost dead?


=== START OF READ SMART DATA SECTION ===

SMART Self-test log structure revision number 1
Num  Test_Description    Status                  Remaining  LifeTime(hours)  LBA_of_first_error
# 1  Short offline       Completed without error       00%     
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Remaining is a separate column from "Life Time (hours)" -- 00% means the test finished. Above you didn't list what the lifetime hours left were.

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Remaining is a separate column from "Life Time (hours)" -- 00% means the test finished. Above you didn't list what the lifetime hours left were.

The lifetime hours left 18634.  Not sure why that wasn't included.

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^ Ah, well the test isn't indicating there is anything wrong your drive then and the remaining column isn't saying you drive is dead. That doesn't necessarily mean the drive is good though.

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OP: If you can take it into the apple store. They have more detailed hard drive diagnostics that will tell you if the drive is bad. Sadly, SMART isnt always right about hard drive failures. Ive not only seen it myself, but constantly I see people online go "hey my hard drive died but the smart status was good when this problem first came up".

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You're not showing an error though and I think the percentage likely counts down from 100% to 00% when its finished (or the 1 got cut off). To me it sounds like a RAM issue, but macs are strange. have you ran MEMtest86+ or the mac-equivalent of it, preferably overnight?

 

you should be able to make a linux boot disk from a distro like ubuntu and boot right up to the memtest program by holding the 'apple' key when powering up until it chimes/keyboard comes awake. (hold too long it won't start booting)

 

Also I find SMART tests most effective when the HDD in question isn't the one hosting the test. Run it from the boot media-->terminal or a separate ram-loaded OS like ubuntu. This way you can do a full SMART test, which takes some time but verifies the HDD sectors as well as the other main functions. SMART only boils down to how well the vendor (probably hitachi) implemented it though.

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OP: If you can take it into the apple store. They have more detailed hard drive diagnostics that will tell you if the drive is bad. Sadly, SMART isnt always right about hard drive failures. Ive not only seen it myself, but constantly I see people online go "hey my hard drive died but the smart status was good when this problem first came up".

 

I don't have applecare on it so taking it to my local store won't do anything for me.  I might try swapping the drive out for a new ssd and see if that works.

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You're not showing an error though and I think the percentage likely counts down from 100% to 00% when its finished (or the 1 got cut off). To me it sounds like a RAM issue, but macs are strange. have you ran MEMtest86+ or the mac-equivalent of it, preferably overnight?

 

you should be able to make a linux boot disk from a distro like ubuntu and boot right up to the memtest program by holding the 'apple' key when powering up until it chimes/keyboard comes awake. (hold too long it won't start booting)

 

Also I find SMART tests most effective when the HDD in question isn't the one hosting the test. Run it from the boot media-->terminal or a separate ram-loaded OS like ubuntu. This way you can do a full SMART test, which takes some time but verifies the HDD sectors as well as the other main functions. SMART only boils down to how well the vendor (probably hitachi) implemented it though.

 

OS X has built in ram test tools.  You just have to press option+d after the start chime to go into the test tools.  I'll run some tests and see

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I don't have applecare on it so taking it to my local store won't do anything for me.  I might try swapping the drive out for a new ssd and see if that works.

They won't charge you to test it at the genius bar.

Alternatively, give Smart Utility a try. It makes reading that stuff much easier.

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I don't have applecare on it so taking it to my local store won't do anything for me.  I might try swapping the drive out for a new ssd and see if that works.

 

What? What gives you this idea? The genius bar is completely free. Also they would NEVER recommend you go with them for a hard drive replacement in a mac mini. Hell ive seen the GB tell people "you know its easy as pulled the wireless atenna crowling off and pulling the drive out.... *hint hint nudge nudge*.

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I used smart utility as recommended and it also found no errors with the hard drive.  I also ran ram tests and after 2 passes no errors were found.  I am stumped as to what is causing this.  The only think I can think of is that the drive is encrypted with filevault.

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I used smart utility as recommended and it also found no errors with the hard drive.  I also ran ram tests and after 2 passes no errors were found.  I am stumped as to what is causing this.  The only think I can think of is that the drive is encrypted with filevault.

 

Yeah if its not the hardware it must be a software issue. Something hanging in the background, bad/corrupted kexts can probably do it too.

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