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- Newsgroups: comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware
- Path: sparky!uunet!usc!sdd.hp.com!hp-col!hplsdrn
- From: bae@hplsdrn.col.hp.com (Bruce Erickson)
- Subject: Re: Tape Backups and memory
- Message-ID: <1992Aug26.141940.16516@col.hp.com>
- Sender: bnr@hplsdrn.col.hp.com
- Date: Wed, 26 Aug 1992 15:15:43 GMT
- References: <BtKJt7.7wo@andy.bgsu.edu>
- Organization: Hewlett-Packard Logic Systems Operation
- Lines: 21
-
- In comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware (subj: Tape Backups and memory), Bob Lee writes:
- > I am now the proud owner of a CMS 250 MB tape drive and I had just one
- > question. Being new to the workings of tape backup systems I was a little
- > disappointed when I found out that once you save a volume of files onto the
- > tape there is no way to erase the volume unless you erase the whole tape.
- > Is this a limitation of the hardware design of the tape drive or is there
- > software out there that can make the tape drive "smarter" and allow volumes
- > to be deleted and/or overwritten.
-
- (Out on a limb here -- I am not familiar with the CMS tape drive -- but I
- am quite familiar with tape units in general....)
-
- This is probably a limitation of the software. Tape backup units typically can
- overwrite sections (perhaps with "fuzzy edges" where they start/stop, depending
- on the precision of the transport mechanism). But consider this: if you want
- to keep the data *after* the volume you erase, you can only store something
- that is the same size or smaller than the volume you overwrite. This is
- because few, if any, tape software allows fragmenting of data sets...
-
- - Bruce Erickson
- bae@col.hp.com
-