1401_withpeople_a_600

IBM 1401 Processing Unit and Tape Drives, circa 1960

Through the course of a long career I have worked with many, many types of tape systems and consider myself a reasonably knowledgeable user of these systems. I have come to believe that tape doesn’t belong in any serious backup strategy if an alternative can be found, specifically removable hard disk systems like the High-Rely NAS and DAS backup devices. Admittedly, in some cases the cost of tape per Gigabyte of storage can’t be beat. But the cost savings are often artificial when you consider the massive amount of human effort wasted struggling with tape backup or restore that doesn’t work.

Consider the following general problems with tape and tape drives:

  1. Tape is slow and often difficult to restore from. Tape is not “random access” media. This means to retrieve a particular file requires fast forwarding to a certain spot on the tape. This often results in substantially slower data recovery times than if you wanted to retrieve a file from a random access media such as a hard drive (or even a slow floppy drive). Often the speed is so slow it is more cost effective to redo a file or retrieve it in any number of other ways leaving retrieval from tape as a “last resort”. In an attempt to compensate for this shortcoming tape software vendors such as Backup Exec often create “catalogs” on the local hard disk to speed forwarding or rewinding the tape to the approximate proper location. If these catalogs get lost or corrupt, data retrieval is even SLOWER than usual.
  2. Tape is extremely sensitive to dust and dirt commonly found in today’s non-filtered server rooms. Businesses in the concrete, mining, construction and other “dirty” industries frequently burn through tape drives and start getting errors in less than 4 months. Even relatively “clean” industries and office environments often have problems associated with paper dust or other air-borne contaminants.
  3. Tape is basically magnetic particles on a flimsy polyester base film. The base film is subject to stretching, expansion and breakage. With the tight tolerances required of the read/write heads a normal tape can stretch and easily cause errors when reading or writing data. Despite what the tape vendors say, the higher the density and speed of the tape the more sensitive the tape will be.
  4. Tape is exposed to air and the moisture and contaminants in the air. Tapes are not hermetically sealed as is the case with hard drives. Thus, there is no inherent protection for the problems discussed above. Even mold and mildew are possibilities in moist climates.
  5. A tape cartridge exposed to any serious high temperature is in danger of melting. There are many cases of hard drives surviving fires and having data recovered. For example, see http://www.drivesavers.com/museum/index.html Such stories are far more rare with tape.
  6. In the real world, I have observed that good tapes are reliable for no more than about 50 uses. I should note that this flies in the face what tape manufacturers will claim in their spec sheets. They often specify “duty cycles” of 100’s of thousands of uses. Although I’m sure some tape “expert” will contest a low usage number like 50, I found it extremely interesting on a recent visit to a TV station to notice “tick marks” on the DLT tapes they use for storing commercials. When I asked about it they said they see errors if a tape is re-used more than 50 times so they started tracking usage and archive the tapes after that many uses. This exactly coincides with my own observations in the computer world where backup tape should be rotated out after about one year of weekly use (about 50 uses).
  7. Tapes written on one drive often fail to read on another drive (even if the second drive is the exact same model and manufacturer). It is often explained this is due to differences in “head alignment”. This problem has been around since tapes were invented and it is completely unacceptable that your data be vulnerable to the failure of the specific tape drive it was written on.
  8. Tapes written on higher capacity drives (for example, 400GB) cannot be read on lower capacity drives (for example, a 200GB drive). Despite tape vendor claims, tapes written on lower capacity drives often STILL cannot be read on higher capacity drives due to tape alignment problems discussed earlier.
  9. Tape Shelf life is a guess. Although there have been numerous studies about tape longevity and stability that have produced valuable information, such as the work conducted by the National Media Lab in the mid-1990s, an accelerated aging test that produces meaningful quantitative data about magnetic media longevity does not exist. Some experts state that generally magnetic tape “lasts” anywhere from ten to sixty years. They tell us that “The principal means to prolonging tape life is to maintain an appropriate player, to keep original materials in stable, cool and dry storage conditions and to strictly limit the use of original materials” (See reference to quoted text below) But how can this be done in a “real world” network backup environment? It is simply unrealistic.
  10. Tape Drives Fail – We all know electronics fail. But it seems to me that whether it’s the moving parts in a drive or the extremely sensitive components, the number of returns on tape drives greatly exceed similarly complex electronics systems. I have no data to back this observation up. It is an opinion only.

In closing I have to say I believe Tape vendors in general have poor technical support, poor ethics, and won’t admit the technology is problematic. As an example of poor ethics I site the common industry practice of quoting compressed capacities and speeds for tape. In the real world the compressibility of data is an unknown and thus should not be a prominent part of the marketing of the capacity of a tape.  For example, LTO-6 is shown as 2.5TB raw, and 6.25TB compressed.

As another example I would point to the poor technical support common in the industry which exacerbates the number of hours spent troubleshooting problems by at least 2 or 3 times as they put us through paces with bad advice that has nothing to do with the basic problem. They have us check the SAS connectors, flash the BIOS of the drive, clean the tape heads and try new tapes. By this time we’re so frustrated they hope we will figure WE are the ones doing something wrong.

If you have a choice, I recommend you just say NO to tape!