2018-03-17 at 8:09 PM UTC
Has anyone actually experienced this? By bit rot I mean a bit getting flipped by cosmic radiation or magnetic field degradation on static media, causing data corruption that is undetectable by the filesystem and only noticeable once you try to open the file and everything is garbled.
Some people consider it a serious issue and use checksumming filesystems like ZFS with RAID to detect and repair silent corruption. I've never encountered it on my personal boxes or any servers I've worked on, so I think these concerns may be overblown and the Hamming codes used for error correction on modern drives do a pretty good job of dealing with this at a hardware level. That said, I do store important files in archive formats that can recover from some level of corruption, and I'm considering a switch to btrfs or ZFS on my NAS and running a monthly scrub just in case.
2018-03-17 at 8:17 PM UTC
How would you know that was the cause of the problem though?
2018-03-17 at 8:19 PM UTC
im not saying it was aliens but...
2018-03-17 at 9:15 PM UTC
you do realize the actual physical residence of the data is on a cheaply made piece of thin metal, embedded within a 'matrix' of magnetic 'goo' with the resiliency of a snow man in death-valley...rite?
2018-03-17 at 9:16 PM UTC
i use teracopy with copy verification.
is that good enough ???
2018-03-17 at 11:25 PM UTC
-SpectraL
coward
[the spuriously bluish-lilac bushman]
This used to happen all the time with compressed Microsoft .cab files. One minute the file would be fine, next minute it would be corrupt. No rhyme or reason.
2018-03-19 at 8:36 AM UTC
Surprisingly the rate of cosmic radiation bit flipping (one of my favorite metrics) is actually high enough that most people with a rotational harddrive have probably experienced it a few times. Every filesystem you're likely to use implements CRC or some other kind of error correction logic though, so the chances of you experiencing data loss as a result is so vanishingly low that it's extremely unlikely anyone here has ever seen it.
This dude has some math on it.
Spectral is just fucking retarded because there is zero reason for one filetype to be more affected than another by the phenomenon.
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2018-03-19 at 10:49 AM UTC
-SpectraL
coward
[the spuriously bluish-lilac bushman]
.Cab files absorb more cosmic radiation than other filetypes.
2018-03-19 at 10:57 AM UTC
Originally posted by -SpectraL
.Cab files absorb more cosmic radiation than other filetypes.
I mean this seems like an irony post but it's spectral after all, he could actually be this dumb.
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2018-03-19 at 11:14 AM UTC
-SpectraL
coward
[the spuriously bluish-lilac bushman]
I've also found .rar files to be quite suspect.
2018-03-19 at 5:55 PM UTC
Originally posted by -SpectraL
.Cab files absorb more cosmic radiation than other filetypes.
true but not becos of the file type but due to how windows OS places files of this type on the HDD.
.cab files are fragmented and spreaded all over the HDD unlike other files that were written in clusters .... and becos of their spread, their chances of getting hit by cosmic radiation were much greater.
the solution to this problem is incredibly simple ... simply mount your HDD vertically, this decreases the chances of your HDD platter getting hit by cosmic rays exponentially.
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2018-03-19 at 6:56 PM UTC
sounds like money is needed.
2018-03-19 at 8:31 PM UTC
This is crazy, didn't know this was even a thing.
So how would one store data for a long period of time like hundreds of years?