On 8/11/2016 6:43 PM, Chuck Guzis wrote:
On 08/11/2016 02:08 PM, Stan Sieler wrote:

<snip>
I've had a couple of tapes with "fooler" double file marks.  The first
was a zero-length file--had I thought to look at the block count
(000000) in the HDR label, it would have been obvious.

The second was a bit more involved--the tape started off in 6250 GCR
mode and read to EOF just fine.  However, I picked up perhaps half a MB
of data, which seemed too little for a 10" reel.  Rewind, manually set
the density to 1600 and read, letting the drive skip over what was now
interpreted as erased tape.  What followed was a complete half-reel of
1600 data that would have been lost.  My guess is that someone had an
"oh sh*t" moment, reset the density manually and finished the tape off
in the lower density as intended.
That sounds like someone just set a Cipher 990 or such to 6240 GCR and overwrote it. The 1600bpi was residue which was previous tape contents?

Sometimes the stars align and there are not any tape errors when you do what you do. Only way to know is whether there is a PE burst at the start of the 1600bpi data, which would be there if they had done what you suggest. And PE bursts should only appear @ the BOT I think as you say with streamers.

I don't know what the rack Pertec PE formatters did. Those were the 4" high boxes with a couple of boards with the original twin 50 pin input IDC connectors on the back, and cabling out to the tape, which was a Pertec of some sort.

I also had a 6" 600' only Pertec formatted, with a builtin PE formatter. I don't know if either wrote the PE Burst.

That was mainly useful on the Cipher 1600 / 3200 drives to figure out the density on read. (I think).
thanks
Jim
   I don't know if this could be
recovered with most SCSI streamers, which don't allow density changes
except at BOT.

War stories...I love 'em.

--Chuck










(Yes, that begs the question...if you're archiving a tar tape ... do
you *want* the data past the first EOF?  (Which could be part of a
prior (and longer) tar, or something else.))  (And then there are the
people who put tar after tar after tar on the same tape :)

Stan



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