8.1 Uses for Removable Hard Disk Drives
Although most systems do not need a removable hard drive, such drives
have the following uses:
- Expanding storage on obsolescent laptop systems
-
Installing a larger hard drive
in a desktop system is trivial, but on a proprietary laptop system it
may be impossible or extremely expensive to upgrade the hard drive.
If you're faced with this situation, using an
external cartridge-based hard disk drive may extend the usable life
of the laptop.
- Transporting large amounts of data
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If you need to transport large amounts of data to remote sites, a
removable hard drive may be the only practical option.
Cartridge-based removable hard disk drives store up to 20 GB, and
frame/carrier-based removable hard disk drives are limited only by
the capacity of the largest standard hard drives available. For
example, one of our readers works for a company that produces digital
special effects for movies, always on very short deadlines. The time
needed to back up 100 GB of image data to tape—as well as the
cost and complexity of installing the required $35,000 tape drives at
each end—makes tape impractical. Instead, they install a
frame-based removable hard disk drive system at each end, copy the
huge data files to high-performance SCSI hard drives, and FedEx the
hard drives to the movie production company. When the disk arrives,
the production company staff simply plugs it into the frame and
copies the data from the removable hard drive to the server.
- Allowing one computer to boot cleanly into multiple operating systems
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Software
development and similar work that requires
using multiple operating systems always presents a problem. You could
configure one PC to multi-boot different operating systems, but that
is seldom entirely satisfactory. You could install a dedicated
computer for each OS, but doing that is expensive, generates a lot of
noise and waste heat, and means you're soon covered
up in computers. Or you could use one computer with a
frame/carrier-based removable hard drive. Installing each OS on its
own hard drive means you can simply insert the carrier with the
appropriate OS, restart the system, and have the equivalent of a
dedicated PC running that OS.
That's why we use a frame/carrier unit on our main
test-bed system. We know one person who does the same on his home
computer. He, his wife, and his children each have their own hard
drives mounted in carriers. He uses Linux, his wife uses Windows
2000, and the kids use Windows 98. When someone wants to use the
computer, he inserts his own hard drive and restarts the system to
boot into his own environment, with no worries about conflicts or
accidentally damaging someone else's data or
configuration.
- Supporting multiple very large data sets
-
Although it is a specialized application, some scientists, market
researchers, and others need to manipulate extremely large data
sets—sometimes in the 10 GB to 100 GB range. Although it may be
possible to build a PC with sufficient disk space to store all the
data sets on the main hard drive, it's often cheaper
and more efficient to allow those data sets to be swapped in and out
as needed. If there are many such data sets, using a frame/carrier
removable hard drive may be the only practical option.
- Specialized backup requirements
-
Although one or another tape technology is usually the best choice
for routine backup, there are times when
tape is simply not practical, either because of the time required to
back up or the time required to restore. For example, assume that you
have a 150 GB database stored on a mirrored set of Seagate Barracuda
180 Ultra160 hard drives. Your backup window is very short, and no
existing tape drive is large enough and fast enough to back up that
entire 150 GB in the time available. Furthermore, even if tape were
workable for backup, you can't afford to have the
database offline for the time it would take to restore it.
If the frame/carrier unit, the OS, and the host adapter all support
hot-swapping and RAID, you can remove and insert drives as needed
without downing the server. In that situation, you might install
three frame/carrier-based removable hard drives, each with a Seagate
Barracuda 180 hard drive. Two of those would be mirrored/duplexed to
provide primary storage. The third would be used as a destination for
an image of the working data set. The 160 MB/s transfer rate of
Ultra160 SCSI theoretically allows you to transfer the entire 150 GB
database to the target drive in about 32 minutes—with half the
160 MB/s throughput used for reads and half for writes—although
in practice it might take twice that long. Still, in comparison to
even a very fast tape drive, the disk-to-disk transfer takes no time
at all. Also, that backup hard drive can be replicated offline on
another system for redundancy. With a recent backup stored on a hard
drive, if you have a catastrophic failure you can simply insert the
backup hard drive and run directly from it, without spending the time
needed to recover from tape.
- Securing data
-
If you work with extremely sensitive data, using
a removable hard disk drive allows you to secure that data by taking
it with you or by storing it in a vault. When we first encountered a
removable hard disk drive many years ago, this was the reason that
drive was being used. The corporation ran two payroll systems, one
for executives and the other for everyone else, and was paranoid that
an employee would find out just how much more the executives were
paid than everyone else. The executive payroll system used a
removable hard drive, which was secured in the vault immediately
after the executive payroll was run. And their fears were perhaps
justified. If it's any indication, when we had to
troubleshoot a problem with the payroll software on the executive
payroll computer, it turned out that the problem was that the field
for monthly salary could not exceed $99,999!
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If you use a removable hard drive to secure your data, it must be
bootable and should be the only hard drive in the system. If the
removable drive is configured as a secondary hard drive, the internal
primary hard drive may retain temporary files, backup data files, OS
swap files, and similar files that could compromise the security of
your data. For absolute data security, configure the system without a
permanent hard drive and always power down the system when you remove
the drive.
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