9 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting
1. AIX
Hi
I need to make some restore tapes for our old AIX systems
I have purchased some DDS2 tapes and cleaning tapes
The tape drive is rmt0
what commands can I enter to run the cleaning tape through the drive
and are the any commands I can enter to test these drives
prior to using... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: madmacher
2 Replies
2. AIX
Hi All,
Are there recommendations about the use of cleaning tapes in DDS devices?
Should I clean the tape only when the drive indicates cleaning? Should I clean it once a month, week, even every day?
Is it harmful to clean the tape every day?
Thanks for your insights.
--Peter (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: petervg
4 Replies
3. Solaris
hi,
i am using Solaris 8 on a sparc box and already have 4 tape drives in a backup libaray attached to my unix server. we have recently added 2 new tape drives to the libaray and now want to get unix to see them. have it working in windows.
how do i scan for new hardware and add theses new... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: dshakey
5 Replies
4. Solaris
I have a server/domain on a m5000 running Solaris 10. It is part of a cluster.
The other cluster member sees tape drives, but this one does not.
It is zoned correctly, and I can see the drives are binded in lputil.
The st.conf, and devlink.tab are identical.
ST.CONF: -
#
# Copyright... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: pfwhufc
1 Replies
5. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
Hi all
I have BIG headache with an old unix server I have and I need some help and ideas how to solve them effectively. Thanks in advance
***Story***
I have an OLD SCO OpenServer 5 release 5 server with DDS4 tape device.
I also have a box full of DDS4 tapes with data inside. I... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: khaos83_2000
3 Replies
6. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
Dear Experts and Advanced User,
I encounter a rare problem as mentioned above. I am not able to read the tape cartridge using the following command:
#dd if=/dev/rmt/0mnb ibs=16k | tar tvf -
It will prompt me with the message saying DD I/O error, broken pipe; everytime the above command... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: stufftiger
1 Replies
7. Solaris
Hello, I am trying to copy a boot tape DDS-01 with miniroot, but i donīt get this copy. i have already used the command dd, but donīt work. There are other way to get it. (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: carelias
0 Replies
8. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
Hey guys,
I'm trying to mount a SUN DDS-2 tape drive on a SUN Ultra 80 machine running Solaris 9. I had the SCSI drive connected at time of install, I'm very new to Solaris so I don't know if Solaris would detect the drive like that and install some form of device driver. But, what im posting... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: kingdbag
2 Replies
9. Shell Programming and Scripting
is it possible to see what is in a dds tape?
like in dos, we can write dir a: to see the contents of it?
thanks
PS : actually, i came from a DOS background. so most of the time, i will try to relate unix to dos. of course, dos never came close to unix. but unix is like many instances of dos... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: yls177
3 Replies
MT(1) BSD General Commands Manual MT(1)
NAME
mt -- magnetic tape manipulation
SYNOPSIS
mt [-f tapename] command [count]
DESCRIPTION
The mt program is used to give commands to a magnetic tape drive. By default mt performs the requested operation once. Operations may be
performed multiple times by specifying count.
Note that tapename must reference a raw (not block) tape device. If tapename is of the form "host:tapename", or "user@host:tapename", mt
writes to the named tape device on the remote host using rmt(8).
The rmt(8) process on the remote host is typically initiated via rsh(1), although an alternate method such as ssh(1) can be specified via the
RCMD_CMD environment variable.
The available commands are listed below. Only as many characters as are required to uniquely identify a command need be specified.
asf Move forward count files from the beginning of the tape. This is accomplished by a rewind followed by fsf count.
eof, weof Write count end-of-file marks at the current position on the tape.
fsf Forward space count files.
fsr Forward space count records.
bsf Back space count files.
bsr Back space count records.
rewind Rewind the tape. (The count is ignored.)
offline, rewoffl
Rewind the tape and place the tape unit off-line. Where supported, this ejects the tape. (The count is ignored.)
status Print status information about the tape unit. (The count is ignored.)
retension Retensions the tape. Not all tape drives support this feature. (The count is ignored.)
erase Erases the tape Not all tape drives support this feature. (The count is ignored.)
eew Enable or disable early warning EOM behaviour. Set count to nonzero to enable, zero to disable.
eom Forward space to the end of recorded media. (The count is ignored.)
blocksize, setblk
Set the tape blocksize to count bytes. A count of zero sets variable blocksize.
density, setdensity
Set the tape density code to count as specified in the SCSI-3 specification. See the DENSITY CODES section for a list of codes
for commonly used media types.
rdspos Read the logical block position of the tape. Not all tape drives support this feature. (The count is ignored.)
rdhpos Read the hardware block position of the tape. Not all tape drives support this feature. (The count is ignored.)
setspos Set the logical block position of the tape to count. Not all tape drives support this feature.
sethpos Set the hardware block position of the tape to count. Not all tape drives support this feature.
compress If count is zero, disable compression. Otherwise enable compression. Not all tape drives support this feature.
If a tape name is not specified, and the environment variable TAPE is not set, then mt uses the device /dev/nrst0.
ENVIRONMENT
If the following environment variables exist, they are used by mt.
TAPE mt uses device filename given in the TAPE environment variable if the tapename argument is not given.
RCMD_CMD mt will use RCMD_CMD rather than /usr/bin/rsh to invoke rmt(8) on a remote machine. The full path name must be specified.
FILES
/dev/rst* Raw SCSI tape device
/dev/rmt* Raw magnetic tape device
EXIT STATUS
mt returns a 0 exit status when the operation(s) were successful, 1 if the command was unrecognized, and 2 if an operation failed.
DENSITY CODES
The SCSI-3 specification defines a number of density codes for various tape media, some of which are listed here. Note that many tape drive
vendors also define model-specific codes.
Code Format
0 Device default
1 1/2" 800 bpi
2 1/2" 1600 bpi
3 1/2" 6250 bpi
4 QIC-11
5 QIC-24
15 QIC-120
16 QIC-150
17 QIC-320/525
18 QIC-1320/1350
19 DDS
28 QIC-385M
29 QIC-410M
30 QIC-1000C
31 QIC-2100C
32 QIC-6GB
33 QIC-20GB
34 QIC-2GB
35 QIC-875M
36 DDS-2
37 DDS-3
38 DDS-4
SEE ALSO
dd(1), ioctl(2), mtio(4), st(4), environ(7)
HISTORY
The mt utility appeared in 4.3BSD.
BSD
March 9, 2008 BSD