Path: utzoo!attcan!uunet!mcsun!ukc!edcastle!cs.ed.ac.uk!cs.edinburgh.ac.uk!nick From: nick@cs.edinburgh.ac.uk (Nick Rothwell) Newsgroups: comp.sys.mac.apps Subject: SUM II's Achilles Heel Message-ID: <1091@skye.cs.ed.ac.uk> Date: 29 Oct 90 12:59:07 GMT Sender: nnews@cs.ed.ac.uk Reply-To: nick@lfcs.ed.ac.uk Organization: Wavetables 'R' Us Lines: 41 I bought myself a copy of SUM II last week. All in all, a nice set of tools, although the program interfaces are a little clunky at times. Anyway: SUM II provides (as I'm sure you know) disk optimisation/defragmentation tools, soft partitioning, and a sophisticated file/volume recovery mechanism which traces deleted files, and can be asked to recover entire volumes, repair directories, and so on. It keeps track of the current system configuration (number and kind of disks) so that it can recover devices which should be there but which aren't mounted. The Achilles Heel seems to be the following: to put it rather bluntly, if something spits on the header of a soft partition file, it's f*cked. Each soft partition is held as a single contiguous file on the main (physical) volume. You can run the optimisation and protection utilities on partitions as well, so you're protected from file deletion and initialisation. But, what if the partition file becomes corrupted so as to be unmountable? You can't recover the contents, because you can't mount it (SUM Recover reports an error not described in the manual and, er, refers you to the manual...). And, you can't recover the partition file itself in the enclosing volume because it's still there, but just corrupted. I don't know how common this kind of failure is. It happened to me after I was trying to optimise a partition with very little available space on it. I presume that corruption elsewhere in the partition is just seen as corruption of the virtual disk, and can be dealt with. Of course, there's no substitute for taking proper backups (which I'd done, of course), but it was rather annoying to have SUM just throw its hands in the air and give up over a simple file corruption. On a vaguely related matter: has anybody else noticed that the help screens for the SUM Partition DA have junk characters in the top right corner? -- Nick Rothwell, Laboratory for Foundations of Computer Science, Edinburgh. nick@lfcs.ed.ac.uk !mcsun!ukc!lfcs!nick ~~ ~~ ~~ ~~ ~~ ~~ ~~ ~~ ~~ ~~ ~~ ~~ ~~ ~~ ~~ ~~ ~~ ~~ ~~ ~~ ~~ ~~ ~~ ~~ ~~ "Now remember - and this is most important - you must think in Russian."