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<p>Thanks. I'll look into this. If I can't get it to make the disk
stay spinning, I can always use a cron job to access a small text
file every 5 or 10 minutes.<br>
</p>
<div class="moz-cite-prefix">On 11/28/21 1:23 PM, AZ Pete via
PLUG-discuss wrote:<br>
</div>
<blockquote type="cite"
cite="mid:5cc6af4b-5709-8a7e-f9d6-ba25aedcc7f4@SonoranZen.com">
<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=UTF-8">
<font face="Calibri">Hi,<br>
I have had the same problem with USB connected drives on my Pis,
but I needed the reverse. Namely, I wanted them to spin down
after some time. The bottom line is that since the hard drive is
connected via USB, the USB hardware itself may prevent the drive
from spinning down (or always shut it down). But, I've had some
success using the smartmon tools package to control how/when a
given hard drive will spin down. The package is called smartmon
tools, but the command itself is smartctl. A few examples:<br>
<font face="Courier New"> <font face="Courier New">sudo
smartctl -a /dev/sda - display all info about
drive<br>
sudo smartctl -g all /dev/sda - get all non-SMART
settings (i.e. Advanced Power Mgmt setting)<br>
sudo smartctl --set=apm,127 - set Advanced
Power Mgmt<br>
sudo smartctl --set=standby,241 - set standby
timer to 30min (not sure if this superseded by apm setting)</font><br>
</font><br>
A low value means aggressive power management and a high value
means better performance. Possible settings range from values 1
through 127 (which permit spin-down), and values 128 through 254
(which do not permit spin-down). The highest degree of power
management is attained with a setting of 1, and the highest I/O
performance with a setting of 254. A value of 255 disables
Advanced Power Management altogether on the drive (not all
drives support disabling it, but most do).<br>
<br>
You'll have to dig into the man pages and play around with the
various APM settings to see if you can get things to work as you
like.<br>
<br>
If all else fails you could just set up a cron job which runs a
script every minute that simply touches a file on the drive
(i.e. touch /some_folder/some_dummy_file.txt), which should
prevent it from spinning down.<br>
<br>
Hope this helps.<br>
Peter<br>
<br>
<br>
</font><br>
<div class="moz-cite-prefix">On 11/27/2021 9:00 PM, Jim via
PLUG-discuss wrote:<br>
</div>
<blockquote type="cite"
cite="mid:a073e3b9-5306-ad72-abd4-0515eeba101d@gmail.com">I have
a hard drive attached via a USB adapter to my raspberry pi. The
problem is that the disk always shuts down after a few minutes
of inactivity. When I want to access something on the disk or
write to it, I have to wait for it to spin up. How would I go
about setting it so it doesn't spin down? I tried to look
online and found sdparm mentioned, but found nothing I could
understand. Please help. Thanks <br>
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<br>
<br>
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