Difference between revisions of "Talk:Script for theft alarm using HDAPS"

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(suitability for disk parting)
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Works great. Maybe we can the script for testing the disk park patches by Jon Escombe <lists@dresco.co.uk>
 
Works great. Maybe we can the script for testing the disk park patches by Jon Escombe <lists@dresco.co.uk>
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-- [[User:Ozi23]]
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You can use it for testing, but note that the specific algorithm used in this script (threshold on standard deviation of samples during last second) is optimized for the theft deterrent situation. It is highly unsuitable for the head parking application, since it reacts too slowly -- by the it will recognize the movement, the disk heads will have already crashed. For head parking you'd need a low-latency algorithm, and preferably an in-kernel implementation to allow frequeny low-overhead polling, reduce latencies, and avoid accidentally spinning the disk ''up'' when loading or swapping in userspace stuff needed to spin the disk ''down''.
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--[[User:Thinker|Thinker]] 20:20, 14 Nov 2005 (CET)
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Revision as of 20:20, 14 November 2005

Wonderful idea! And works perfectly on my T43p, scared the cat away. ;)

--spiney 20:35, 12 Nov 2005 (CET)


Good, so it's at least a cat deterrant! A friend of mine had a nasty incident involving a laptop and a cat... BTW, I'm the author (identifed by IP address again due the usual ThinkWiki autologin flakiness).

--Thinker 20:52, 12 Nov 2005 (CET)


I had to tweak the line that reads the position file. My position file has - numbers in it for some reason, so: m/^\(-(\d+),-(\d+)\)$/ or die "Can't parse $pos_file content\n";

After that change it works great. It scared the dogs away here. ;) --nirik 21:24, 12 Nov 2005 (CET)


Fixed. Which ThinkPad model, BTW?

--Thinker 21:44, 12 Nov 2005 (CET)


Cool. Excellent. ;)

T42p here.

--Nirik 21:45, 12 Nov 2005 (CET)

Works great. Maybe we can the script for testing the disk park patches by Jon Escombe <lists@dresco.co.uk> -- User:Ozi23


You can use it for testing, but note that the specific algorithm used in this script (threshold on standard deviation of samples during last second) is optimized for the theft deterrent situation. It is highly unsuitable for the head parking application, since it reacts too slowly -- by the it will recognize the movement, the disk heads will have already crashed. For head parking you'd need a low-latency algorithm, and preferably an in-kernel implementation to allow frequeny low-overhead polling, reduce latencies, and avoid accidentally spinning the disk up when loading or swapping in userspace stuff needed to spin the disk down.

--Thinker 20:20, 14 Nov 2005 (CET)