Microdeal Backup (Hard Disk backup utility)

Reviewed by Matthew Jones

 

Issue 27

May/Jun 87

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As explained in my review of the Atari SH204 hard disk (Issue 26), the process of backing up any hard disk onto floppies can be very slow and laborious. A backup program is used to simplify the process by organising the copying of each file and folder onto disks, and asking for another when the current disk becomes full.

BACKUP'S DESKTOP

Backup is a GEM based program, and when loaded it displays a set of icons on the left of its desktop. These icons consist of one for each disk drive on the system (it is possible to backup floppies too), and a single 'Path' icon which enables backups of an individual folder (and its sub-folders). The menus available are File, Options and Help (the help is of limited use).

File gives you the main control options, which include 'Full backup' (copy every file on the specified drive / path), 'Incremental backup' (using the flag set by TOS, as explained in the SH204 review), and 'Backup by date' which allows you to backup any files created after a given date. To use these, you select an icon (and give the path if appropriate), and then select the menu item. The backup then proceeds as dictated by the options set.

OPTIONS

Options enables you to choose whether to format, zero (a fast version of format) or leave the destination disk alone, skip or copy system and hidden files, verify writes, set the number of buffers, not segment files and update the 'history'. Write verification is extra to the normal verify of the floppy, and if the data is valuable (what isn't?) then this is useful extra security. Non-segmentation of files is used to stop Backup splitting a file in two if it does not fit in the space left on the current backup disk. If you want to be able to use the files directly off the floppy, then this is useful (see later). The history is a record kept on the hard disk of each file that has been copied onto floppies, and may be useful as an audit trail.

While backing up, a 'format' dialog is displayed, which allows you to choose which drive to backup files onto (A: or B:), and whether to format, zero or use as-is (useful to have the choice again for each new floppy), and the drive/floppy type. Available types are Single/Double sided, 80/40 track and 9 or 10 sectors per track, which allows you a great deal of flexibility, and to get the maximum on the disk. The 40 track option is useful if you have a 40 track 512 inch IBM type drive (on which disks are cheaper), but the disks formatted cannot then be used on an IBM PC.

Restoration is done by selecting the icon and then selecting 'Restore' in the file menu. Paths are supposed to work too, but my version does not. This is disappointing as it would also be nice to restore only a directory from a previous complete backup. You can select a 'Don't overwrite files' option which stops an existing file being overwritten by a restore, but this just stopped the whole restore when I tried it. Due to these problems, I always backup in 'don't segment' mode, which means I can do partial restores using the normal GEM Desktop copying ability. Full drive restores do work properly however.

Image backups and restores are available, which mean that the Backup program will take copies of each individual sector on the hard disk, regardless of what it may contain (file or otherwise), and copy it to floppy. Restoration just copies it straight back, overwriting anything that was there before. The floppies created are useless to GEM Desktop, and the process is one you should only use if you want to mirror the hard disk absolutely at a later date. Image restores will overwrite everything new and old, so use with caution.

PROBLEMS...

As you might have guessed, Backup is not without fault. In fact, the faults are too numerous to list them all, but they range from small and insignificant (the pointer at the format dialog is a busy bee not an arrow), through bad program logic (after giving a path, clicking on a new drive still uses it), to the disastrous (it sometimes hangs for no apparent reason in the middle of a backup - bad news 17 disks into the backup). When it hangs, you have to reboot, which also loses your history file update. Backup is also unable to backup the folder from which it is being run!

So much for problems, which can be sorted out in updates (I hope), but what I would also like to see in future versions is the ability to see, before a backup, a list of what is likely to be backed up, and having an option to stop a file. This is because I find it very wasteful to have BAK files and others on the floppies, just because I forgot to delete them first (or didn't find them). Also, as mentioned above, the ability to restore partial directories or files from a larger backup should be provided.

CONCLUSION

Despite the problems, some major, I would not be without this program (at the moment there is no competitor. Microdeal must release a new version (and at low cost to existing owners), but for the moment this is a great improvement on previous backup methods.

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