dvdisaster
Developer(s) | Carsten Gnörlich |
---|---|
Initial release | 0.40.7 (August 22, 2004 | )
Written in | C |
Operating system | FreeBSD, Linux, NetBSD (Cross-platform till version 0.72.3) |
Available in | English |
Type | Data recovery |
License | GPL |
Website | Archived 28 April 2018 at the Wayback Machine |
dvdisaster is a computer program aimed to enhance data survivability on optical discs by creating error detection and correction data, which is used for data recovery. dvdisaster works exclusively at the image level. This program can be used either to generate Error-Correcting Code (ECC) data from an existing media or to augment an ISO image with ECC data prior to being written onto a medium. dvdisaster is free software available under the GNU General Public License.
Recovery modes
When an optical disc is physically damaged (such as by scratching), or has begun to deteriorate, some parts of the data on the disc may become unreadable. By utilizing the ECC data previously generated by dvdisaster, damaged parts of the disc data can be recovered.
The two modes of ECC data generation in dvdisaster make use of Reed–Solomon codes. In RS01 mode, the generated data is created from a disc image and is stored in a separate file, which must be written on some other medium. Alternatively, in RS02 mode, the ECC data is appended to the end of the disc image before the image is burned to disc.
When a CD or DVD has been augmented in RS02 mode, the 'augmented' section of the data remains invisible to the normal user, and the disc remains fully compatible with computers without knowledge of or installation of dvdisaster. In this way a damaged disc may be fully recoverable by installing the software, accessing the Reed-Solomon error correcting code using dvdisaster and rebuilding the image (to hard disk).
dvdisaster can be helpful to recover the contents of a damaged disc even when no ECC data is available. The entire disc can be read into an image, skipping damaged parts. dvdisaster can then repeatedly rescan just the missing parts until all damaged areas have been filled in by correct data.
Difference with other Reed-Solomon implementations
dvdisaster applies an image-based approach to data recovery. It does not apply a file-based data recovery, as reading a defective medium at the file level means trying to read as much data as possible from each file. But a limitation of the file-based approach arises when data sectors are damaged which have book-keeping functions in the file system. The list of files on the medium may be truncated. Or the mapping of data sectors to files is incomplete. Therefore, files or parts from files may be lost even though the respective data sectors would still be readable by the hardware. In contrast, reading at the image level uses direct communication with the drive hardware to access the data sectors.
It is important to point out that each unit of ECC data dvdisaster places at the end is calculated from sectors of the original data spread around in the original image. Each group of original data sectors and the added ECC sector(s) forms a "cluster". Any part of the cluster can be recovered as long as the amount of damages in that cluster is smaller than the amount of added ECC data in that cluster, therefore the location on disk of the ECC data doesn't matter.
Clusters are different in Parchive, since each file is considered as a single block: with dvdisaster data loss begins when one of the clusters has more than about 15% of errors (unlikely to happen but theoretically possible with few KiB of data[1]), while Parchive can recover any error, provided that the PAR2 files are intact and that the number of corrupted files (it doesn't matter how much corrupted) is smaller than the number of available ECC files. dvdisaster also has a mode with separate ECC files.[2]
See also
- Data recovery
- Error detection and correction
- Optical disc authoring
- Reed–Solomon error correction
- Parchive
- List of data recovery software
- List of free and open-source software packages
References
- ^ "Technical properties of the error correction". Archived from the original on 2014-10-13. Retrieved 2015-02-07.
- ^ "The RS01, RS02 and RS03 methods". Archived from the original on 2015-02-07. Retrieved 2015-02-07.
- Ben Martin (February 7, 2008) Use dvdisaster to protect backups on optical media, Linux.com
- (in Italian) Andrea Ghirardini, Gabriele Faggioli, Computer forensics: Guida completa, Apogeo Editore, 2007, ISBN 88-503-2593-2, pp. 345–347
- Shashank Sharma (March 2009). "DVDisaster". Linux Format (116). United Kingdom: Future Publishing. Retrieved 2010-01-24.
- Mike Martin. "DRAFT PDS CD-DVD Media Test Summary" (PDF). Retrieved 2010-01-23.
- Physical Media Working Group (2007-03-21). "PDS CD-DVD Media Test Summary and Recommendations" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2010-05-27. Retrieved 2010-01-23.
- Krzysztof Daszkiewicz; Arne Arnold; Reto Vogt (5 November 2009). "Jak archiwizować dane na lata". PC World (in Polish). Poland: IDG Poland SA. Retrieved 23 January 2010.
External links
- Archived 28 April 2018 at the Wayback Machine