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Full Discussion: 9-track dinosaur
Operating Systems HP-UX 9-track dinosaur Post 31110 by ncmurf00 on Friday 1st of November 2002 10:26:08 AM
Old 11-01-2002
I tried creating the special device files for D1600 compression, but those don't seem to work.
I really don't know how the previous dev file was created because it was just "always there". It was lost when I re-loaded unix 11.0.
The program that needs to access it has an entry for the device file I can change, and also has this entry:
Device_6=48~48~MT~M/UX~~("avl":0:2048)~~9 track 6250
I don't know if this needs to be changed.
 

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NG_DEVICE(4)                                               BSD Kernel Interfaces Manual                                               NG_DEVICE(4)

NAME
ng_device -- device netgraph node type SYNOPSIS
#include <netgraph/ng_device.h> DESCRIPTION
A device node is both a netgraph node and a system device interface. When a device node is created, a new device entry appears which is accessible via the regular file operators such as open(2), close(2), read(2), write(2), etc. The first node is created as /dev/ngd0, all subsequent nodes /dev/ngd1, /dev/ngd2, etc. HOOKS
A device node has a single hook with an arbitrary name. All data coming in over the hook will be presented to the device for read(2). All data coming in from the device entry by write(2) will be forwarded to the hook. CONTROL MESSAGES
The device node supports one non-generic control message: NGM_DEVICE_GET_DEVNAME Returns device name corresponding to a node. SHUTDOWN
This node shuts down upon receipt of a NGM_SHUTDOWN control message, or upon hook disconnection. The associated device entry is removed and becomes available for use by future device nodes. SEE ALSO
netgraph(4), ngctl(8) HISTORY
The device node type was first implemented in FreeBSD 5.0. AUTHORS
Mark Santcroos <marks@ripe.net> Gleb Smirnoff <glebius@FreeBSD.org> BSD October 19, 2004 BSD
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