>>>>> "drescherjm" == John Drescher <dresche...@gmail.com> writes:
>> Now, I doing : >> >> mt -f /dev/nst0 erase >> >> But I issue this command at 8:07 AM GMT, and now is 9:44 AM GMT, is it >> common that it takes too much time? >> drescherjm> That can take a very long time drescherjm> A better way is: drescherjm> mt -f /dev/nst0 rewind drescherjm> mt -f /dev/nst0 weof drescherjm> mt -f /dev/nst0 rewind That's certainly a much faster method, and so better in the case where you're just trying to rewrite the tape yourself. I can think of one rare circumstance, though, where "mt erase" is probably better than "mt weof" (I say "probably" because I'm about to spread some of my own speculation, based on external observations made while retiring some old DLT tapes, rather than on an insider's knowledge of how tape drives work internally). I assume that "mt erase" takes so long because it actually is clearing the entire length of the tape, rather than just putting an end-of-data marker at the beginning of the tape, while leaving the original data undisturbed on the far side of that eod marker. (I observed that when I issued mt -f /dev/nst0 erase the tape drive's "in use" LED blinked for about 2 hours, the same amount of time it blinked if I ran dd if=/dev/zero of=/dev/something bs=126b where "/dev/something" was a special device name to open the drive in uncompressed mode). So, in principle, the data after the end-of-data mark written by "mt weof" might still be readable with somebody with the wherewithal to write a custom device driver to force the tape head past the eod mark, and almost certainly would still be readable to someone with the ability to disassemble the tape cartridge and build their own custom raw tape reader. I doubt most of us have data that anybody would want to steal badly enough to build custom hardware for the job, but there probably are quite a few shops whose official procedures require that erased data actually be overwritten before media is discarded, unless the tapes are destroyed. Incidentally, there was another bit of circumstantial evidence supporting this hypothesized distinction between "mt erase" and "mt weof". Running "mt eod" on a tape which had just been submitted to "mt erase" caused our DLT drive to sit thinking for 15 minutes or so before it would accept any other commands, while "mt eod" after "mt weof" returned immediately. If I remember correctly, a posting on backupcentral (which I can't find again now) speculated that the erase command overwrote a directory between tape files and tape blocks, hence leaving the drive lost when it initially reloaded the tape. -- John Jorgensen LCD System Administrator jorg...@lcd.uregina.ca 306.337.2344 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ _______________________________________________ Bacula-users mailing list Bacula-users@lists.sourceforge.net https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/bacula-users