On Oct 31, 2016, at 2:58 PM, jim stephens <jwsmail
at jwsss.com> wrote:
If you cared about not erasing the drive manufacture's data on sealed media
Winchester and the like you have to avoid any writes to cylinder 0 at all.
The drive formatting software could read that cylinder track 0 for a defect map. Nothing
to stop you from overwriting it, but you would then need to do a local media certification
that is more complicated than just formatting the drive, and mapping out defective tracks
/ sectors.
I never worked with a system that had a controller or software that could read the defect
track, so don't know how that was used. Later drives with more intelligence in the
drive are another matter, but in those cases, the hiding of the defect data can be a task
assigned to that processor, and don't need magic handling of the addressing.
I haven't seen drives that put the defect data on track 0. DEC put it at the very end
of the drive (see DEC Std 144). And as I recall, CDC did likewise in the 844 drives (RP04
lookalikes). As for software using that data, RSTS certainly did.
paul