"The era of magnetic tapes" has not ended.

It is just that some people mysteriously believe their data is safer "in
the cloud" where they cannot monitor it,
than on a tape in a fire safe under their own supervision. I have read back
tapes I wrote myself 30 years earlier.
Have you tried getting your data back from a deceased "cloud provider"?

That is why we get all these stories of ransomware attacks.

Also, for many of us that have spent half a century learning Unix, we do
not want our well proven tools snatched from our hands.
There is room for more than one knife in a virtual tool box.

On Sat, 11 Dec 2021 at 23:58, Stuart Longland <stua...@longlandclan.id.au>
wrote:

> On Sat, 11 Dec 2021 18:06:43 +0200
> <u...@mailo.com> wrote:
>
> > The Cult of DD
> > Mar 17, 2017
> > You'll often see instructions for creating and using disk images on Unix
> > systems making use of the dd command. This is a strange program of
> > [obscure provenance](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dd_(Unix)) that
> > somehow, still manages to survive in the 21st century.
> >
> > Actually, using dd is almost never necessary, and due to its highly
> > nonstandard syntax is usually just an easy way to mess things up. For
> > instance, you'll see instructions like this asking you to run commands
> > like:
> >
> > […snip…]
> >
> > ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
> > End of article and my questions:
> >
> > Is the author right in general?
> > Is the author right for Linux environment?
> > Is the author right for OpenBSD environment?
>
> Can `cat`/`tail` et all, create a "sparse" file?
> > vk4msl-gap$ dd if=/dev/zero bs=1M count=1 seek=9 of=sparsefile
> > 1+0 records in
> > 1+0 records out
> > 1048576 bytes transferred in 0.009 secs (108639200 bytes/sec)
> > vk4msl-gap$ ls -lh sparsefile
> > -rw-r--r--  1 stuartl  stuartl  10.0M Dec 12 08:42 sparsefile
> > vk4msl-gap$ du -hs sparsefile
> > 1.0M    sparsefile
>
> Very useful for "thin provisioning" of raw disk images with virtual
> machines.
>
> Can `cat`/`tail` et all read bytes from the middle of a file?
> > vk4msl-gap$ echo -n '000102030405060708090a0b0c0d0e0f' > test
> > vk4msl-gap$ dd if=test of=test.part bs=2 skip=4 count=4
> > 4+0 records in
> > 4+0 records out
> > 8 bytes transferred in 0.000 secs (66541 bytes/sec)
> > vk4msl-gap$ cat test.part
> > 04050607
>
> Can `cat`/`tail` et all overwrite specific bytes in the middle of a file?
> > vk4msl-gap$ echo -n 'aaabacad' | dd of=test bs=2 count=4 seek=8
> conv=notrunc
> > 4+0 records in
> > 4+0 records out
> > 8 bytes transferred in 0.000 secs (98985 bytes/sec)
> > vk4msl-gap$ cat test
> > 0001020304050607aaabacad0c0d0e0f
>
> I think you'll find `dd` was written in the era of magnetic tapes as a
> storage medium, and so the ability to seek to a specific part of a tape
> then perform a read or write, was seen as a critical feature of the day.
>
> That same feature is handy when doing various low-level disk operations
> as well (e.g. backing-up/restoring the boot sector/partition table).
> --
> Stuart Longland (aka Redhatter, VK4MSL)
>
> I haven't lost my mind...
>   ...it's backed up on a tape somewhere.
>
>

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