[Info-vax] Backup A Dying Disk.
Jerry Weiss
jsw at ieee.org
Wed Mar 18 12:44:19 EDT 2015
On Wednesday, March 18, 2015 at 8:11:56 AM UTC-5, Phillip Helbig (undress to reply) wrote:
> In article <mebruj$9gc$1 at dont-email.me>, David Froble
> <davef at tsoft-inc.com> writes:
>
> > Phillip Helbig (undress to reply) wrote:
> > > In article <a2950ec9-8f65-4de8-b839-6062b280386b at googlegroups.com>,
> > > wa2flq <jsw at ieee.org> writes:
> > >
> > >> I have RD54 disk that that whose entropy is rising. Someone who doesn't hav=
> > >> e a backup asked me to save what I can before it dies completely. I realiz=
> > >> e its probably a goner, but I want to give it a shot.
> > >
> > > If the data are worth saving, where is HBVS?
> >
> > On a MV-II ?
>
> Possible.
>
> > On VMS V5.2 ?
>
> I don't know. I came in at 5.5, but started using HBVS on 7.1. I don't
> know when it was introduced.
>
> > Shadowing is not a replacement for a good BACKUP strategy.
>
> Right. However, one thing it deals with really well is maintaining data
> integrity in the case of disk failure.
The system I am recovering data from was has been a hobbyist system. So I'm just trying to recover what I can for my friend who came to Vaxen late.
I know the Maxtor XT2190 disks have a long history of bit rot. I haven't seen the root cause (Bearings? Electronics?) mentioned when I search around the next. The server has a TK70. I may try to reformat the drive just for the "fun" if can find the correct MV2000 XXDP program and remember how to generate a bootable tape.
Most of my personal museum runs on Seagate SCSI-2 type drives and SCSI2SD emulation.
More information about the Info-vax
mailing list