Sound too theoretical to make you care about filesystems? Let's talk about "bitrot," the silent corruption of data on disk or tape. One at a time, year by year, a random bit here or there gets flipped. If you have a malfunctioning drive or controller—or a loose/faulty cable—a lot of bits might get flipped. Bitrot is a real thing, and it affects you more than you probably realize. The JPEG that ended in blocky weirdness halfway down? Bitrot. The MP3 that startled you with a violent CHIRP!, and you wondered if it had always done that? No, it probably hadn't—blame bitrot. The video with a bright green block in one corner followed by several seconds of weird rainbowy blocky stuff before it cleared up again? Bitrot. The worst thing is that backups won't save you from bitrot. The next backup will cheerfully back up the corrupted data, replacing your last good backup with the bad one. Before long, you'll have rotated through all of your backups (if you even have multiple backups), and the uncorrupted original is now gone for good. |
Wednesday, January 15, 2014
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