Actually, with DDS tapes, you can generally write one gen back and read two. So, a DDS3
drive can read DDS1 and write DDS2.
On Mar 23, 2015, at 10:56 AM, Chuck Guzis <cclist
at sydex.com> wrote:
On 03/23/2015 08:46 AM, Douglas Taylor wrote:
I have a couple of 4mm and 8mm tapes that contain data I want to
recover. The 4mm is DDS-1 and was written using tar on a SGI system in
1998. My questions are;
'What modern DAT tape drive will read this tape? How backward
compatible is this technology?'
Depends largely on the manufacturer. For example, a QuantumA DDS-4 drive should be
backward-compatible. For other brands, check the manufacturer's specification.
This seems like an easy problem and intend to use
a linux system to read
the tape.
Frankly, it's probably better to use the same software to restore the tapes that
wrote them than trying to suss out the results of a plain dump.
The 8mm tapes were also written on an SGI system, however it was in 1994
and the IRIX Backup utility was used. IRIX 5 was
probably used. Any
ideas?
Exabyte 8mm tapes, like DDS tapes, were pretty good in conforming to SCSI tape standards,
so they should work just tine, provided that you have the right drive. For 1994, an 8700
should do the job.
Of course, you'll have to deal with the block size issue if these are not
Unix-native, but that's been discussed before here.
--Chuck