9 track tapes and block sizes
Paul Koning
paulkoning at comcast.net
Thu Sep 17 14:06:39 CDT 2020
> On Sep 17, 2020, at 2:11 PM, Chuck Guzis via cctalk <cctalk at classiccmp.org> wrote:
>
> On 9/17/20 8:56 AM, Jon Elson via cctalk wrote:
>
>> This is not necessarily true. Many systems can handle "VBS" (Variable
>> Block Sequential) tape files.
>> But, yes, fixed block size is more common.
>
> "Hybrid" files are quite common, where all blocks are the same size, but
> for the last one. Or, in the case of some PDP 11 tapes, there's a short
> record containing file name, etc. followed by the file data in
> uniformly-sized blocks, but for the last one in the file.
Even there you might find some oddities.
A RSTS distribution tape, for recent releases, begins with some DOS-11 formatted data, i.e., 14 byte file header and 512 byte data. That is followed by ANSI labelled data, so 80 byte file labels and data in a VMS-style backupset, 2048 byte blocks I think.
paul
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