I’m writing a program that wraps around dd to try and warn you if you are doing anything stupid. I have thus been giving the man page a good read. While doing this, I noticed that dd supported all the way up to Quettabytes, a unit orders of magnitude larger than all the data on the entire internet.

This has caused me to wonder what the largest storage operation you guys have done. I’ve taken a couple images of hard drives that were a single terabyte large, but I was wondering if the sysadmins among you have had to do something with e.g a giant RAID 10 array.

14 points

a .png of your mom’s width

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1 point
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3 points

I mean dd claims they can handle a quettabyte but how can we but sure.

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3 points

dd can’t really handle quettabytes! GNU has taken us all for fools! Alert the masses! Wake up sheeple!

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2 points
dd if=/dev/zero of=/dev/null status=progress
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4 points

I synced to the BSV shitcoin which is 11+ terabytes. So large I had to turn on throwing away the rest of what I downloaded because it wouldn’t fit on all of the storage media I own. I feel sorry for the people running an archive node.

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6 points

My Chia crypto farm at its peak had about 1.5 PB of plots, each plot was I think about 100ish gigs? I’d plot them on a dedicated machine and then move them to storage for farming. I think I’d move around 10TB per night.

It was done with a combination of powershell and bash scripts on Windows, Linux, and the built in Windows Services for Linux.

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