In my case as the whole setup was installed when the daily backup was only about 10GB this problem slowly crept up on me. Again if I had the time, possible a weekend when I could slow the server down a bit, I would take a new tape and using any data I could lay my hands on, see just how much Std and compressed data the tape can hold. The very wording COMPRESSED is a bit vague. Does it mean that if I were to get 40GB of data and compress it, it would then fit on the tape. How can anyone know (only roughly) just how much 40GB can compress to. If the files involved are already in a 'Zip' type format they are not likely to compress much at all. On the other hand, taking my 27GB ish limit on my tapes, this could mean that 27GB is the expected compressed volume from an original 40GB uncompressed data source. Why can't the makers just put the amount of room on the tape in std bytes. It could also be argued that the tape should handle 40GB in any form and this if compressed could be the equivalent of perhaps 60GB uncompressed. Please escuse me while I bang my head on the wall. If I by a 180 min VHS tape I know I can get 180 min of video on it. True, on long play I can get more but then there is a quality issue. I just want to buy a tape that will accept 40GB of data in whatever format I choose.
The second problem that I seem to have, especially if the limit for uncompressed data is about 27GB, is the BE software. Just how many times should you have to say 'use hardware compression if available if not software'? How many times should you have to tell it to use 'any media' and 'Overwrite media'. These options are always set. What I need is another button that says 'there is a tape in the drive, using whatever compression, just bl**dy get on with it'
Hey it's Friday, time to chill out, poets day and all that. Mustn't get wound up. Have a nice weekend all..
Best whatsits,
Tim.