Hi guys,
I don't know about you guys, but fairly regularly, i find tapes ending up in the retired media pool, when i'm fairly confident there is nothing really wrong with them. Reason given is usually excessive read write errors.
I've got two libraries, with about 150 LTO4 tapes in each and find maybe a handful of tapes every couple of weeks or so get deprecated. Auto cleaning is setup on the tape libraries, so drives are regularly cleaned. Tapes ages are a mixture of 6 months to 2 years. Any range of new or old tapes get deprecated. Even new ones when they were only a few weeks old.
Obviously just bringing them back into the scratch pool (which is what i'm doing) isn't ideal, but i'm not going to throw away what i'm fairly sure are perfectly working tapes.
How can you *really* tell when a tape is deprecated?
No one wants to take chances with their data, how do others deal with this? I assume other people see this issue to some degree.
TIA
I don't know about you guys, but fairly regularly, i find tapes ending up in the retired media pool, when i'm fairly confident there is nothing really wrong with them. Reason given is usually excessive read write errors.
I've got two libraries, with about 150 LTO4 tapes in each and find maybe a handful of tapes every couple of weeks or so get deprecated. Auto cleaning is setup on the tape libraries, so drives are regularly cleaned. Tapes ages are a mixture of 6 months to 2 years. Any range of new or old tapes get deprecated. Even new ones when they were only a few weeks old.
Obviously just bringing them back into the scratch pool (which is what i'm doing) isn't ideal, but i'm not going to throw away what i'm fairly sure are perfectly working tapes.
How can you *really* tell when a tape is deprecated?
No one wants to take chances with their data, how do others deal with this? I assume other people see this issue to some degree.
TIA