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Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers How to decrypt audio data from magnetic tapes? Post 302896626 by Corona688 on Tuesday 8th of April 2014 11:28:07 AM
Old 04-08-2014
Well, what's your original software? How does it work? Only it can answer those questions.

It's probably extremely slow because it's a tape. To find any particular contents it must do a large amount of very slow seeking.
 

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DDD(1L) 																   DDD(1L)

NAME
ddd - double-speed data dumper SYNOPSIS
ddd [option=value] ... DESCRIPTION
Ddd works almost the same way as dd(1), but it has a much better throughput, especially when used with slow i/o-devices, such as tape drives. The improvement is achieved mainly by dividing the copying process into two processes, one of which reads while the other one writes and vice versa. Also all code conversion capabilities are omitted. There is no additional overhead copying data between various conversion buffers. Ddd was inspired by the vast difference in speed between BSD4.2 and BSD4.3 dumps - in BSD4.3 dump(8) uses alternating processes to write to raw magnetic tape, thus keeping the tape continuously in motion. I wanted to get the same improvement to remote dumps, so this filter was needed. Directing all physical I/O through ddd usually increases the throughput of any pipeline of unix commands (if you have enough MIPS and RAM to handle two extra processes). OPTIONS
Ddd uses options if, of, ibs and obs exactly as dd(1). Option bs can also be used to specify ibs and obs at once. One option differs slightly in meaning: cbs can be used to specify the size of the internal buffer. Input and output processes will swap duties when cbs bytes have been transferred. Default values for all sizes are 512 bytes. As with dd(1), letters k (kilobyte), b (block) or w (word) can be appended to size values. Other options are not provided. HINTS
For best performance, block sizes should be rather large. For magnetic tape, I use obs=100b and cbs=500b or so. Large block sizes (~100b) are also effective for network connections. However, cbs should be small enough for all the data to fit in core, since page faults add overhead. AUTHOR
Tapani Lindgren <nispa@cs.hut.fi> Laboratory of Information Processing Science Helsinki University of Technology Finland SEE ALSO
dd(1), tar(1), dump(8) BUGS
Should you find one, let me know! WARNING
(Applies to U.S. residents & citizens only) Do not use this program! Get rid of it as soon as you can! It will probably corrupt all your data, break down your computer and cause severe injury to the operators. Even reading the source code may give you a headache. I warned you! I will take no responsibility what- soever! DDD(1L)
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