@phiwer
extensively tested -
card has received several formats from FFS / SFS
card has received several formats from FAT32 / NTFS
card has undergone large bock read / write tests under Amiga (Native)
card has undergone large bock read / write tests under Amiga (CyberSCSI II)
card has undergone large bock read / write tests under Amiga (GVP - IOData R/SCSI IDE Bidge)
card has undergone large bock read / write tests under PC (various software)
device has been confirmed Healthy in Parition Magic 8.1
Some manufactures also provide testing software for their products, I use SanDisk's software, for their CF cards, however I beleive that both Kingston and Transcend offer some software to test their cards.
Most of the testing above was done some years ago, before the big splash of CF cards being used as Harddisks in Amiga's hadn't been done, a fellow EAB'er "Shrub" got the idea and we started testing a load out as CF cards / adapter and IDE / SCSI devices.
we found that the big factors in the day were CF cards ATA IDE MODE and CF card to IDE Adapters - there were a few cheap (and expensive) adapters that wouldn't allow the CF Card into IDE mode
Well this kind of testing is what I was looking for.
In regards to anything reliable - as you know, if its mission critical - no matter the media you save it to... back it up! =)
Very true!
And now to the question of backup. Any good software on the amiga for this task? I intend on having my amiga connected to my *nix network at home, so maybe I'll just use rsync for the task of wiring the file(s) to another system. What I need is a scheduler on the amiga, which would do daily backups to an lzx/lha file, this would in turn would be wired using rsync.