[Shop-talk] OT flash drives
Battmain
battmain at yahoo.com
Mon Apr 27 16:31:29 MDT 2020
I am also using a NAS. I got hit some time ago by a botnet when I was playing with the ftp port forwarding to use with the security cams. Somehow they found the port and I was getting hit with 6 logins attempts per second. It was pretty interesting to watch while I let it go, but I got alerted pretty much immediately and the IPs were blocked almost immediately too. IPs were from all over the world per the lookup tool. I have added some more routers and adding some enterprise level firewalls now. I also understand I am not as smart as some of the people out there, but it sure keeps the brain actively learning and I am loving my NAS.
As for the drives, I usually google review on the brand/size first and determine if the losses are worth the risk. Just like physical drives, I have found over the years that true capacity is occasionally overstated. As someone mentioned, the cheaper drives don't seem to last as long. I also make it spend a few hours/days doing a real format instead of a quick format. Check out the NAS route and see if it might work for you. Many of them use hot swappable ports and you can do any RAID combination you wish. Also automated backups and file syncing is well worth the setup and reading time.
On Monday, March 16, 2020, 11:13:36 PM EST, John Innis via Shop-talk <shop-talk at autox.team.net> wrote:
I have had mixed results with these. Actually pretty much the same results I see with flash-based drives. The cheap ones seem to fail often, where the good ones seem to last forever. Forever meaning at least a few years. I have had a number of mechanical drives fail while sitting on the shelf for years at a time. Flash seems less susceptible to the bit rot issue. Generally speaking, you want your backups running on drives that are hooked up and updating. Preferably in a RAID arrangement that provides some level of redundancy. If you don't want to go the RAID route, rotate drives so your backups are redundant.
A note on cloud based services. They are generally very good at what they do, but there are different risk when using the cloud. For example this week an un-patched bug was announced in windows 10 that could have security implications for some cloud based services. There is a risk that hackers could get in and steal your data or ransom it. Cloud is great for off site backup in the event of fire or other local disaster, and for getting data to other locations, but I would not trust is as my only source of backups.
On Thu, Mar 12, 2020 at 2:00 PM Doug Braun via Shop-talk <shop-talk at autox.team.net> wrote:
A USB portable hard drive (the real, spinning kind) should be much more reliable than a run-of-the-mill USB flash drive, as long as you don't handle it roughly.
Doug
On Thu, Mar 12, 2020, 8:26 AM Tim . via Shop-talk <shop-talk at autox.team.net> wrote:
Sending this inquiry to you all since I know there are more than a few IT guys in this group.....
I bought three 512GB flash drives for archiving here at work. One locked up in each of our offices and one for me to add to files as necessary as files are amended. They have approximately 450GB on them.
One of the three failed as soon as I finished filling it. I bought a different brand and made a replacement copy for the safe in our Madison office. A second, the same brand as the first one that failed is locked up in our MKE office and will also be replaced now because the third one (the one that has amended archived files) is also failing. I am having a hard time retrieving the amended files before this drive takes a final crap on me. It took over 15 hours to pull one 87MB file from the dying drive. I can't even attempt to pull more than one file at a time. Not that this should matter, but the files are mixed word, pdf, saved outlook emails and miscellaneous audio or video files and possibly other items.
What I am wondering/hoping is that someone might know of a solution to this nearly impossible retrieval process. Or am I just screwed here?
Next year we will be storing everything in the cloud so I won't have to deal with this PITA process.
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