Date: Thu, 10 Jun 2004 20:53:39 +0000 From: "Stefan A. Deutscher" <sa.deutscher@tiscali.de> To: freebsd-questions@freebsd.org Subject: Quick File Access (QFA) for tape devices in FreeBSD? Message-ID: <20040610205338.A4895@tiscali.de>
next in thread | raw e-mail | index | archive | help
Hi, I've got another question regarding tape access in FreeBSD. I am running 5.1Release on the box in question, but didn't see anything else on 4.8Release either. I find that, when using tar or dump, finding and restoring some file from a large archive on tape takes often a long time: - tar just appears to access the tape sequentially, reading it until it has encountered and restored the desired file. Which, when it is near the end of a 12 GB DDS-3 tape takes from minutes to hours. - restore is pretty fast to _find_ the tape index, but -- even though it says it would be quick to skip over parts of a volume to the file to be restored, it does take quite a bit of time to complete as well. 'A long time' here means, significantly longer than the 40 seconds or so that modern DAT hardware needs to access locations on tape using quick file access (QFA): The tape device forwards/rewinds with increased speed to position the head (well, actually: the tape) right above the block of interest, rather than working its way through the whole 400+ feet. For this to work, there needs to be some sort of index file that holds for each file on tape the physical and/or logical position. The OS/2 port of GNU tar (GNU tar version 1.10 - AK 2.58), does offer such a feature, and it is activated with a -D option and works pretty fast: -D --tape-directory [M,]F use/maintain tape directory in file F mode M=abs : use both absolute and relative addressing when available (def) M=rel : use relative addressing only M=rel requires volume labels I have not found anything like that in the versions of tar and dump on FreeBSD 5.1, don't know about bsdtar though. Is it me or is it not implemented? If not, are there any other tools available to us which do allow QFA? And, if not, should I submit this as a suggestion/PR via send-pr for tar and dump, or to the gnu-tar folks for the tar part of it? Cheers, Stefan
Want to link to this message? Use this URL: <https://mail-archive.FreeBSD.org/cgi/mid.cgi?20040610205338.A4895>