Amanda 8mm Tape Label
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Amanda is a slightly idiosyncratic but
outstanding network backup system. We use it to back up the entire
BedroomLAN on 8mm,
112m tapes (same as 8mm videotapes, only made from better quality materials ― I hope)
on an Exabyte EXB-8500C drive. The tapes are dead cheap these days,
and each holds 5 gigs (uncompressed).
Lovely. Amanda even prints her own labels or inlays for your cartridges, tapes, CD-Rs et cetera!
This is a heavily modified version of the
8mm tape label template shipped with Amanda. There are quite a few new things here.
- Better aesthetics. Helvetica makes it a bit lighter on the eye, and a few extra
shades of grey make it look even better. There are also bolder lines.
- More information and better arranged (for my own setup, anyway). The label section shows the tape label (duh), Amanda version and date in full. There's a square section for marks, logos, stickers et cetera. The rear (top) section
shows whatever Amanda wants us to show. Usually this is the total backup size,
percentage of tape used, overall compression ratio and the number of
filesystems on tape. The filesystem table shows tape file numbers (in case you
want to seek them manually with
mt), hosts, filesystems, dump size
in megabytes, compression ratio and dump level. Around 27 partitions fit on
each column of each page.
- Re-arranged column format. On the original Amanda labels, partition listings run all the way down to the bottom of the sheet, then go to the right column. I've reversed this behaviour. This template has three two-column pages, and both
columns of each page are completed before partition lists overflow to the next
page. This way, more partitions are normally visible without opening the tape
case.
- No scissors needed. I can't be bothered with them. It gets tedious. You can print the template out on A4 paper and fold it according to the included instructions. On the BedroomLAN HP LaserJet 4, it works lovely (your mileage may vary though, especially with different printers).
The template was basically modified by hand. Did I mention I like
Postscript? The folding diagram was drawn in xfig, then stuck
inside the Postscript file as Encapsulated Postscript, hand-resized and
hand-positioned (I make it sound so difficult!).
You can download the template here. It's
completely unsupported, but if you find it useful, I'd love an email
(send it to alexios (at) bedroomlan (dot) org)!