Just FWIW. I have been experimenting with imaging flash. Using R-Studio, ReclaiMe Pro and UFS Explorer, the ones that I consider 'the big three'. I don't know how well this extrapolates to ACE DE. In all experiments Stabilizer was used, all with same time-out (300 ms) and reset options (power-cycle). Speed optimization was set to standard.
What's the big deal? The big deal is that we'll see more and more flash based drives with read instabilities that we will need to image/clone somehow. The situation is kind of a catch 22. If the drive becomes unresponsive a power cycle is the only thing that can wake it up, and yet each power cycle is one step closer to the death of the device.
Observations:
R-Studio:
Was a disaster, I am not even going to detail that. Already starts with detection of unstable flash connected over USB via Stabilizer. I don't know what it's trying to do but it is unresponsive for minutes during drive discovery phase, resulting in multiple power cycles by USB Stabilizer. Their dialogs during imaging suggest you can modify some stuff on the fly, but doing that causes the interface to become unresponsive. At one point Windows blue screened can't tell if this is due to Stabilizer or R-Studio.
ReclaiMe Pro:
You can not fine tune imaging options precisely enough and a disk map is missed. I will get to that when I get to UFS. The minimum large block size is too large. Skip can not be precisely configured, minimum is too large and is in MB rather than sectors, I fail to see logic in that. Optimal values that I later determined in UFS can not be applied in ReclaiMe because minimum values simply don't allow for it.
ReclaiMe behaved stable, and with some adjustments to the imaging module, I am convinced it will be on par with UFS with regards to imaging flash based drives. By adjustments I mean allow for smaller large block sizes (128 KB was way too large in this experiment), Skip size should be in sectors rather than MB and should allow for smaller values (in this experiment 24 sectors was the best solution) and a true 1 block per LBA sector disk map helps determining these optimal values.
UFS Explorer:
Best use standard Windows IO. It's more stable than other options.
Disk map is extremely useful as each block is an actual LBA address. Using disk map I was able to figure out ideal block size and ideal number of sectors to skip after error. That dramatically reduced the number of errors (I could do multiple reads before an error occurred), reduced situations where USB STBLZR was forced to power cycle, reduced number if blocks skipped. Results in 4x speed and amount of data actually being read during first pass.
Stabilizer, flash and R-Studio, ReclaiMe Pro and UFS Explorer
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Stabilizer, flash and R-Studio, ReclaiMe Pro and UFS Explorer
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Re: Stabilizer, flash and R-Studio, ReclaiMe Pro and UFS Explorer
Since UFS upgraded their imaging functions within UFS Explorer Professional, I've felt that it might become the best alternative to a hardware imager, when working in conjunction with DeepSpar USB stabilizer.
One thing about the R-Studio imaging features is the ability to do smart partition copying.
One thing about the R-Studio imaging features is the ability to do smart partition copying.
Re: Stabilizer, flash and R-Studio, ReclaiMe Pro and UFS Explorer
This test should be repeated with R-Studio started in safe mode (run RStudio -safe from its installation folder and with admin privileges).Joep wrote: ↑Tue Dec 08, 2020 2:02 pm R-Studio:
Was a disaster, I am not even going to detail that. Already starts with detection of unstable flash connected over USB via Stabilizer. I don't know what it's trying to do but it is unresponsive for minutes during drive discovery phase, resulting in multiple power cycles by USB Stabilizer. Their dialogs during imaging suggest you can modify some stuff on the fly, but doing that causes the interface to become unresponsive. At one point Windows blue screened can't tell if this is due to Stabilizer or R-Studio.
When R-Studio starts, it parses data on all disks searching for partitions, file systems, etc. It also starts to read those unstable flash drives during its startup and reads them through the Stabilizer which in its turn tries to read the drives, it freezes R-Studio, and if it crashes, it also crashes R-Studio.
R-Studio in the safe mode doesn't parse any drives, it just enumerates them. You may then open/scan the flash drive and then R-Studio will start accessing the drive.
We're going to add a special shortcut for the safe mode to the R-Studio startup menu in its next release (Technician version only).
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Re: Stabilizer, flash and R-Studio, ReclaiMe Pro and UFS Explorer
That is very useful information. I will try and update!
I'm not too sure what you mean. USB Stabilizer didn't freeze, it was R-Studio that froze when I for example tried to modify retries or skip size (can't remember exactly) in R-Studio GUI. There's a dialog for that, available during imaging which suggests you can modify it on the fly.reads them through the Stabilizer which in its turn tries to read the drives, it freezes R-Studio, and if it crashes, it also crashes R-Studio
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Re: Stabilizer, flash and R-Studio, ReclaiMe Pro and UFS Explorer
R-Studio is waiting for the response from the USB Stabilizer. It may be locked by the system until the response.Joep wrote: ↑Thu Dec 10, 2020 4:48 pm I'm not too sure what you mean. USB Stabilizer didn't freeze, it was R-Studio that froze when I for example tried to modify retries or skip size (can't remember exactly) in R-Studio GUI. There's a dialog for that, available during imaging which suggests you can modify it on the fly.
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Re: Stabilizer, flash and R-Studio, ReclaiMe Pro and UFS Explorer
Understandable. It is just an observation not critique. Normally it may not occur, this was observed during the imaging of a really, really bad drive that dropped practically every few seconds.
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