Preservation of correspondence
Jules Richardson
julesrichardsonuk at yahoo.co.uk
Tue Feb 6 10:38:27 CST 2007
Jim Leonard wrote:
> Jules Richardson wrote:
>> I've always used DLT for backups in recent years; far as I'm aware
>> they have a reasonable level of error detection / correction
>> information built in at the lowest level, I don't see them dying out
>> for a long time, and I prefer the fact that the media's self-contained
>> (unlike CD / DVD which runs the risk of attracting dirt / fingerprints
>> due to handling).
>
> It is rare that they fail completely (they usually slowly develop errors
> over time in heavy use until you have to replace them). But let me tell
> you, if you get the one rare one that does fail, it fails SPECTACULARLY.
> As in, it takes the drive with it!
:-)
I've never had one fail on me, but thankfully it'll always be easy to pick up
either an identical one or one that's compatible with the media used.
>> [1] Yes, tar has some verification options built in, but at least for
>
> Its verification is practically a non-feature. Always generate parity
> or make redundant copies.
Yep, that was my thinking too. I really need to find the time to write a Linux
util to suck tar data off DLT and checksum file-by-file to test backups;
currently I restore the whole archive and then use find/cksum/diff to check
against source data, but it's annoying needing that extra disk capacity just
for the sake of backup testing.
cheers
Jules
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