Difference between revisions of "Talk:Script for theft alarm using HDAPS"
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Wonderful idea! And works perfectly on my T43p, scared the cat away. ;) | Wonderful idea! And works perfectly on my T43p, scared the cat away. ;) | ||
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--[[User:Nirik|Nirik]] 21:45, 12 Nov 2005 (CET) | --[[User:Nirik|Nirik]] 21:45, 12 Nov 2005 (CET) | ||
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+ | I love it! Great contributions, Thinker! | ||
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+ | Of course, it is more proof-of-concept tough, as a thief can simply hit the "mute" button, or carry an old headphone plug with the actual headphones chopped off and stuff this quickly into the audio out jack. Don't leave your laptop unattended :) :) | ||
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+ | --[[User:Gsmenden|Gsmenden]] 18:06, 28 Nov 2005 (CET) | ||
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+ | Thanks! About muting, I'm not sure the mute button will work (I reset the mixer volumes every second), but the thief can certainly power off, or suspend, or pull out the AC and battery. But my hope is that the casual, uninformed laptop-snatcher will trigger the alarm for at least a few seconds, and if you're just down the hall or there are other people nearby, that's probably enough to save your laptop. Not as good as a real lock+alarm, but better than nothing, and pretty convenient when autoactivated by the screensaver (<tt>$use_kde=1</tt>). | ||
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+ | --[[User:Thinker|Thinker]] 01:40, 29 Nov 2005 (CET) | ||
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==Usefulness for head parking== | ==Usefulness for head parking== | ||
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http://lwn.net/Articles/154923/ (kernel patch) | http://lwn.net/Articles/154923/ (kernel patch) | ||
http://bugs.gentoo.org/show_bug.cgi?id=100167 (hdapsd) | http://bugs.gentoo.org/show_bug.cgi?id=100167 (hdapsd) | ||
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Revision as of 01:40, 29 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 $pos_file content\n";
After that change it works great. It scared the dogs away here. ;) --nirik 21:24, 12 Nov 2005 (CET)
Fixed. Which ThinkPad model, BTW?
--Thinker 21:44, 12 Nov 2005 (CET)
Cool. Excellent. ;)
T42p here.
--Nirik 21:45, 12 Nov 2005 (CET)
I love it! Great contributions, Thinker!
Of course, it is more proof-of-concept tough, as a thief can simply hit the "mute" button, or carry an old headphone plug with the actual headphones chopped off and stuff this quickly into the audio out jack. Don't leave your laptop unattended :) :)
--Gsmenden 18:06, 28 Nov 2005 (CET)
Thanks! About muting, I'm not sure the mute button will work (I reset the mixer volumes every second), but the thief can certainly power off, or suspend, or pull out the AC and battery. But my hope is that the casual, uninformed laptop-snatcher will trigger the alarm for at least a few seconds, and if you're just down the hall or there are other people nearby, that's probably enough to save your laptop. Not as good as a real lock+alarm, but better than nothing, and pretty convenient when autoactivated by the screensaver ($use_kde=1).
--Thinker 01:40, 29 Nov 2005 (CET)
Usefulness for head parking
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)
It's even worse that I thought. Check out the IBM white paper - there's barely enough time to park the head, so in the Windows driver they're using some pretty fancy learning algorithm to deduce when movement deviates from "normal", to decide when to redefine "normal".
--Thinker 19:08, 22 Nov 2005 (CET)
Good news every one ..... Just kidding. I've found the hdapsd package which acts as a deamon for the hdaps and uses the kernel patch by Jon Escombe. I havent tested it but some people were able to get the protection system work. It seems to depend on the firmware of the harddrive. Its in early stage so be carefull.
http://lwn.net/Articles/154923/ (kernel patch) http://bugs.gentoo.org/show_bug.cgi?id=100167 (hdapsd)