Then I copied over the installation files for the Colorado backup software. I planned to do the actual installing of the Colorado software on the live PC instead of the emulated PC, since it might do some of the hardware detection during setup.
Once the emulated disk image was complete, I wrote it onto a USB flash drive, plugged the drive into the old PC with the tape drive attached, and booted from the USB drive. Thankfully the old PC has a very versatile motherboard that can boot from pretty much anything. I've searched the web for this QICStream tool, but can't seem to find it anywhere.
Does anyone have access to, or know of a way to obtain, this utility? Or perhaps suggest a more modern backup software that might be compatible with tapes written by QICStream? Some data conversion companies are still capable of dealing with such tapes too. Sign up to join this community. The best answers are voted up and rise to the top. Stack Overflow for Teams — Collaborate and share knowledge with a private group. Create a free Team What is Teams?
Learn more. Ask Question. Asked 2 years, 8 months ago. Active 2 years, 8 months ago. Fortunately the data written to QIC tapes mostly adheres to a single specification, and there are ready-made tools to decode this format. The last version of Ubuntu that included ftape in the kernel was 6. Fortunately this version is readily available for download and can be used as a bootable live CD.
This should create the appropriate logical devices that will let you access the tape drive. If the drive goes into a loop of shoe-shining the tape for more than a minute, you should probably give up on that volume of the tape. Speaking of volumes:. The tape may consist of multiple volumes, which basically means that multiple backups were written to it in succession. When your first dd call is complete, it will stop at the end of the first volume on the tape. But there may be additional volumes.
You may call dd again right afterwards, which will proceed to read the next volume, and so on. You can also use the vtblc tool to see an actual list of the volumes on the tape. You may also want to skip directly to another volume on the tape. This is useful if you encounter errors while reading one volume, and want to jump directly to another volume.
To skip to a volume, use the mt fsf command:. So for example if you want to read the third volume on the tape, execute fsf 2 and start reading. Sign in to follow this Followers 0. Question ljvdz 0. Report post. Posted February 20, I'm desperate to open number of old QIC files, but I just can't seem to get anything to work. I wish there was a trial version available Share this post Link to post Share on other sites. Recommended Posts. Does it sound like Roxio can open these?
Posted February 21, I will follow up on Seagate Backup Exec. Create an account or sign in to comment You need to be a member in order to leave a comment Create an account Sign up for a new account in our community.
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