--On Montag, 29. Januar 2007 18:07 +0100 Cosimo Streppone 
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

>> Using DVD-RAM in combination with bacula is on my projects list. Is
>> anybody actually doing this?
>
> Yes, I am doing this on my home Linux workstation.
> I use a Samsung GSA-2164D dvdrecorder with a plain (no cartridge) DVD-RAM
> disk.
> I'm in the first stage of "try-and-see-what-happens" and I configured
> DVD-RAM device exactly like a usb removable drive, with its mount
> point `/mnt/dvdrecorder'.
> I should only make sure that disc is already mounted when I start the
> bacula job.
> But that is easily solvable with a RunBeforeJob directive (or it should
> be).

Actually I would rather like to use DVD-RAM as a raw device. Just the way 
normal DVD-writing works. What's the point of having a filesystem with one 
file on it? ;-)

Thanks for your post, though.

I have not yet explored how to use raw block devices with bacula (tape 
only). DVD-RAM are random access. So, can I simply use Archive Device = 
/dev/mydvdram and Device type = file?
I guess I just have to try it out. I'll let you know how it goes.

> I found the DVD-RAM media to be somewhat slow when writing full
> directory subtrees, but writing to a file like bacula does works
> smoothly...

This depends very much on the filesystem you use. Most filesystems store 
file meta-data in fixed places. Therefore the drive has to seek across the 
disc to update the meta-data when writing new files (or when making changes 
to the fs in general). This leads to bad performance and also makes the 
medium wear out faster at these sectors. Though I am wondering if the 
latter  one is an issue with DVD-RAMs at all, because of automatic 
relocation of bad sectors and verification. If somebody has a deeper 
insight into this, I would be pleased to be enlightened.
UDF was designed for use with (re-)writable optical media. It writes to the 
disc in a sequential manner. There is no need for the drive to seek across 
the disc and therefore you get better performance. AFAIK linux now has good 
support for UDF, so maybe you want to give it a try.
Sadly, FreeBSD still only has read support. :-(((


Regards,
Georg

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