I have used ioscan -fnC tape and the system identified the tape drive. what is the command to show a listing of what is on the tape? I have used ls /dev/rmt/rmt0 to no avail. can anyone help?
Thanks in advance (10 Replies)
I've recently been tasked with "refurbishing" an HP Proliant ML370 running SCO 5.0...something. This is primarily used for legacy support and is kept on a shelf for safe keeping. The scope of work includes hardware diagnostics and blowing the dust out.
I have run HP diagnostics on the array,... (1 Reply)
Hey folks,
Linux admin here, forced to use Opensolaris to try to use ufsdump/ufsrestore to get some data of some old tapes.
I've got Opensolaris 2009.06 on x86 and a Sony SDX-700V.
As a "control" experiment, I booted the system with a Linux live CD and the tape drive worked perfectly.
... (2 Replies)
Hi,
I'm at AIX 5.3.
My EOD program is giving following error while writing to tape:
Can't write output
cpio: Media Surface error
Failed on Shell-script
cd /; cpio -ocB 2 >> /autoline/misc/logs/bk.CopyToTape < /autoline/work/BACKUP.01022 1>/dev/rm0
I have tried with several new tapes,... (2 Replies)
I have tape drive in one Lpar. when i saw that time tape is in defined state. After that i deleted the tape drive using the rmdev -R command. Then fired the cfgmgr -v command. But I am not getting the tape drive. Now the drive is even not in defined state also. It is not shown the tape drive. How... (1 Reply)
Hello everyone,
First, thank you anyone who might be able to help : ) !!
here it is, I am using SCO at my business, and I back up everything to a tape drive. I want to do my cleaning of the drive, and i put in the cartridge to the drive, it recognizes it yet it will not engage the... (5 Replies)
Hi,
I need to restore my tape backup, when I type "tape status" it gives;
status : ready beginning-of-tape write-protected
soft errors : 0
hard errors : 0
underruns : 3
but... (4 Replies)
FMS(8) AFS Command Reference FMS(8)NAME
fms - Determine a tape's capacity and a tape device's filemark size
SYNOPSIS
fms -tape <tape special file> [-help]
fms -t <tape special file> [-h]
DESCRIPTION
The fms command determines the capacity of the tape currently in the tape device identified by the -tape argument, along with the size of
the filemark for the device. The filemark is also referred to as the device's end-of-file (EOF) marker, and can differ for each combination
of tape and tape device.
As the Tape Coordinator writes a dump, it writes a filemark between the data included from each volume and also tracks the amount of space
left before the end of the tape (EOT). For some tape devices, the filemark is large enough (multiple megabytes) that failure to consider it
leads the Tape Coordinator significantly to overestimate the available space.
The intended use of this command is to determine tape capacity and filemark size values that can be specified in a tape device's entry in
the /var/lib/openafs/backup/tapeconfig file. For certain types of tape drives, the Tape Coordinator operates more efficiently when the
tapeconfig file lists accurate values. For further discussion, see the OpenAFS Administration Guide chapter on configuring the Backup
System.
Insert a tape in the drive before issuing this command.
CAUTIONS
Do not use this command on compressing tape devices in compression mode or with tape devices that handle tapes of multigigabyte (or
multiterabyte) capacity. It does not produce accurate results in those cases. For alternate suggestions on the values to record in the
tapeconfig file for compressing drives, see the OpenAFS Administration Guide chapter on configuring the Backup System.
Running the command completely overwrites the tape, so use a blank one or one that can be recycled.
Because it writes filemarks to the complete length of the tape, the command can take from several hours to more than a day to complete.
OPTIONS -tape <tape special file>
Specifies the UNIX device name of the tape device for which to determine filemark size and the capacity of the tape it currently
contains. The format varies on different system types, but usually begins with /dev; an example is /dev/sd0a.
-help
Prints the online help for this command. All other valid options are ignored.
OUTPUT
The command generates output both on the standard output stream and in the fms.log file that it creates in the current working directory.
The output reports the capacity of the tape in the device and the device's filemark size.
The first few lines of output include status information about the execution of the command, including such information as the number of
blocks and the number of file marks written to the tape by the command. The last two lines of both screen and file output provide the
following information:
o "Tape capacity is number bytes": specifies the size, in bytes, of the tape in the device.
o "File marks are number bytes": specifies the device's filemark size in bytes.
The following message indicates that the fms command interpreter cannot access the tape device. The command halts.
Can't open tape drive I<device>
The following message indicates that the command interpreter cannot create the fms.log log file. Again, the command halts.
Can't open log file
EXAMPLES
The following command illustrates the output for the device called /dev/rmt1h:
% fms /dev/rmt1h
wrote block: 130408
Finished data capacity test - rewinding
wrote 1109 blocks, 1109 file marks
Finished file mark test
Tape capacity is 2136604672 bytes
File marks are 1910205 bytes
The following appears in the fms.log file:
fms test started
wrote 9230 blocks
Finished file mark test
Tape capacity is 151224320 bytes
File marks are 2375680 bytes
PRIVILEGE REQUIRED
The issuer must be able to insert and write to files in the currently working directory, if the fms.log file does not already exist. If it
already exists, the issuer need only be able to write to it.
SEE ALSO fms.log(5), tapeconfig(5)COPYRIGHT
IBM Corporation 2000. <http://www.ibm.com/> All Rights Reserved.
This documentation is covered by the IBM Public License Version 1.0. It was converted from HTML to POD by software written by Chas
Williams and Russ Allbery, based on work by Alf Wachsmann and Elizabeth Cassell.
OpenAFS 2012-03-26 FMS(8)