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tps(7M)								       tps(7M)


NAME    [Toc]    [Back]

     tps, tpsc - SCSI tape interface

SYNOPSIS    [Toc]    [Back]

     /dev/rmt/tps*
     /dev/rmt/*/lun*/c*p*

DESCRIPTION    [Toc]    [Back]

     Silicon Graphics systems support the Small	Computer System	Interface
     (SCSI) for	various	tape drives, including QIC24 and QIC150	1/4"
     cartridges, 9-track, 8 mm video, Ampex DIS/DST series, DLT	(digital
     linear tape), IBM 3590 and	3570, STK 9490 and 9840, STK SD3, Sony GY-10
     and GY-2120, and DAT (digital audio tape) tape drives.  Not all systems
     support all tape drives.  Since so	many different types of	devices	are
     supported,	and not	all their features can be determined directly from the
     drive, a configuration table defines their	capabilities.  This is usually
     found in the file /var/sysgen/master.d/scsi.

     The special files are named according to this convention:

     Parallel SCSI and FC-AL    [Toc]    [Back]

	  /dev/{r}mt/tpscontrollerdID{nr}{ns}{s}{v}{.density}{c}


     Fibre Channel Fabric    [Toc]    [Back]

	  /dev/{r}mt/nodename/lunlun{nr}{ns}{s}{v}{.density}{c}/ccontrollerpport

	       Note that the Fabric device names always	specify	the lun, even
	       if it is	zero.
	       controller is the SCSI controller number	and ID is variously
	       known as	the SCSI ID, the SCSI address, the drive address, and the unit number.
	       The nodename and	port are used to indicate the Fibre Channel
	       world wide name (WWN) and the device port number. A Fibre Channel Fabric
	       device may have multiple	special	filenames. If the nodename and
	       lun of different	filenames are the same,	respectively, these
	       filenames represent the same physical device. Care should be taken not
	       to use the same device at the same time by unintentionally opening
	       different filenames of the same device.

	       The device types	are:

	       {nr}	    no-rewind on close device

	       {ns}	    non-byte swapping device

	       {s}	    byte swapping device

	       {v}	    variable block size	device.	This feature is	present	on most	current
			    generation tape drives, including those from STK, IBM, Sony, Quantum
			    and	others.



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	       {stat}	    a special purpose device;
			    it can be used even	when
			    one	of the other names for the same	physical device	is already
			    opened (see	below)

	       {.density}   for	9-track	tape it	is one of 800, 1600,
			    3200, or 6250; for the Exabyte 8500	it is one of 8200 and 8500;
			    for	DLT7000	it is one of 4000 and 7000

	       {c}	    data compression is	supported for Archive Python 01931 DDS-2 DAT,
			    Sony SDT-9000 DDS-3	DAT, the various DLTs, IBM Magstar 3590
			    and	IBM Magstar MP 3570, EXABYTE 8900, STK 9490 and	9840,
			    STK	SD3, Sony GY-2120,
			    and	Fujitsu	M1016/M1017 3480 devices as shipped.
			    Compression	is not
			    the	same as	density	and should not be confused
			    with density. The degree to	which compression increases capacity is
			    data dependent.

	       These special devices are accessible by only one	program
	       at a time, except for the {stat}	device.
	       Opens on	the {stat} device
	       can block for several seconds, if another name for the same devices
	       is being	opened or closed at the	same time.
	       Similarly, the
	       MTIOCGET
	       ioctl on	the {stat} device can block if long operations are in progress via
	       one of the other	names for the same device.

	       The only	operation the {stat} device supports is	the
	       MTIOCGET
	       ioctl, open, and	close; all other attempted operations cause the	EINVAL
	       errno to	be returned.
	       It never	causes any tape	movement of any
	       kind (in	particular, it never tries to load the tape, even if
	       media is	present).

	       Typically, if this tape drive is	used as	the system tape	drive,
	       the device-specific names described above are
	       linked to user-friendly names in	the /dev directory.
	       See
	       NOTES
	       below and
	       mtio(7)
	       for a description of the	user-friendly names.

SPECIAL	FEATURES
     The different devices support a multitude of capabilities.	 In
     particular, some support multiple densities, some support fixed block
     size only,	many support variable block sizes, some	support	multiple
     speeds, some support direct transfer of audio data	over the SCSI bus.
     Most of these features are	selected by which minor	device is opened, and



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     others must be set	via ioctl commands.  The list of capabilities that a
     particular	drive supports is set by the MTCAN_* bits set in the
     master.d/scsi file	for that drive.	 When a	capability required for	an
     operation is not set, the EINVAL error code is returned for the request.

     In	particular, in audio mode the variable block size device must always
     be	used for I/O, and parameters such as the recording frequency, program
     number, and so on are all part of the data	stream.	 Additionally, when in
     audio mode	the rewind and seek commands return immediately.  If the drive
     is	closed in this state, subsequent opens block until they	are completed.
     If	the drive remains open,	certain	commands, such as MTIOCGET and
     MTIOCAUDPOSN, can be used to determine the	current	position of the	tape
     during the	seek or	rewind operation; the third argument is	a pointer to a
     struct mtaudio.  The MTAUD	tape op	is used	to enable and disable audio
     mode.  The	third argument is 0 to use data	mode and 1 to use audio	mode.

     Many of the features that require ioctls can be set or changed via	the
     mt(1) command.

     The data structures and values for	these ioctls can be found in the
     include file /usr/include/sys/mtio.h, which is shipped with all systems.
     There are extensive comments in this file,	and at this time no attempt
     has been made to document most of them here or in the mtio(7) reference
     page.

     However, there are	a few surprising return	values that are	mentioned
     here.  In particular, when	using partitioned tapes	(see mt	setpart, or
     the MTSETPART ioctl), partition 0 is the 'main' partition,	which is the
     final part	of the tape, and partition 1 is	the partition closest to BOT.
     Partitioned tapes are intended primarily so that a	tape directory can be
     written at	the beginning of the tape, without any worry of	overwriting
     the data portion of the tape.  In addition, partitioned tapes indicate
     BOT (EOT) when at beginning (end) of partition, rather than the 'real'
     BOT (EOT).

     Some devices support overwrite at arbitrary tape positions, while others
     require that the tape be at BOT or	EOD (end of data).  Others allow
     overwrite at any filemark (that is, 8mm from the BOT side of any
     filemark).	 Some experimentation may be necessary to decide what your
     particular	drive supports;	all drives support at a	minimum	writing	at
     both BOT and EOD, assuming	the media isn't	write protected.

TAPE MOVEMENT CRITERIA    [Toc]    [Back]

     The only time the driver ever moves a tape	is when	told to, with the
     exceptions	listed below.  A command that causes tape movement is always
     issued, assuming that it is a valid command and the media is loaded.

     A significant change from IRIX releases prior to 4.0 is that the driver
     does NOT automatically position to	the next filemark on the first command
     that does I/O to the tape.	 This means that mt bsr, and mt	fsr now	have
     meaning since the tape is in fact left where it is	positioned.  It	is now
     the programmer's or user's	responsibility to ensure that the tape is in a



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     valid state for I/O.  The drive or	driver still detects and prevents
     operations	not valid for the current tape position, returning an
     appropriate error in errno.

	  1.  If the first read	after an open encounters a filemark before
	      transferring any data and	the tape was not known to be at	the
	      top of a filemark	or BOT,	the filemark is	skipped	and the	read
	      retried.	Any further errors are reported	exactly	as they	occur.
	      In particular, if	two sequential filemarks are found, the	tape
	      is positioned between them.

	  2.  If a read	command	encounters a filemark, that read returns a
	      short count (if any data was read) or 0.	If a short count is
	      returned,	the next read returns 0, allowing detection of
	      filemarks.  An MTFSF ioctl should	not be done at this point, as
	      the tape drive itself has	already	passed over the	filemark.  If
	      an MTFSF is done at this point, the count	should be decremented
	      by one.  The driver attempts to deal with	this case, but can not
	      always do	so, due	to differences in drive	firmware.

	      The read following the read that returns 0 returns the data in
	      the next tape file, if any.  Note	that this is a change from
	      earlier IRIX releases, which required an explicit	MTFSF or other
	      tape ioctl to move the tape before further reads could be	done.
	      The new behavior is consistent with most actual tape drives and
	      tape drivers in most BSD-derived UNIX systems.  Similarly, if an
	      MTFSR ioctl encounters a filemark, it stops at the filemark and
	      subsequent reads return data from	the next tapefile, if any.

	  3.  If early warning is encountered on a write or write filemark,
	      the driver does not allow	further	writes or write	filemarks,
	      unless the MTANSI	ioctl is issued.  Any data remaining is
	      flushed to tape, if possible.  For the QIC tape drives and the
	      8mm drives, an error is returned on both read and	write unless
	      all the data was transferred when	early warning is encountered.
	      This is so that older multi-volume backups continue to work and
	      new ones can be read on older releases.  All newer drives	(9
	      track, DAT, and future drive types) return a short count if not
	      all the data could be transferred.  Requests other than read or
	      write are	sent to	the tape drive as usual.

	  4.  On close,	if the last tape movement operation was	a successful
	      write (not a write filemark), the	following happens:

	      a)  Half-inch tape drives	write two filemarks and	then backspace
		  one file, so that the	tape is	positioned between the two
		  filemarks just written.  If, however,	the tape is not	in
		  ansi mode and	early warning has been encountered, no write
		  filemark or backspace	is done; filemarks are never written
		  in audio mode.





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	      b)  Other	tape drives write one filemark.	 No backspace is done.

	  5.  On the first status request or request that does tape motion
	      after a system boot, a SCSI bus reset, or	a tape cartridge
	      insertion, the tape is rewound and loaded; this occurs even for
	      the norewind devices.  [Note: This can be	suppressed via
	      master.d/scsi changes (e.g. Ampex	drives)].  In addition,	most
	      drives rewind a tape when	it is ejected.	This means that	if you
	      wish to append a new dataset to a	tape that already contains
	      datasets,	you should always issue	the mt feom command AFTER
	      loading the tape,	just prior to using the	program	that will
	      append to	the tape.  Do not count	on a tape remaining at EOD,
	      just because that	is where it was	before it was removed.

	  For devices that support it, the prevent media removal command is
	  sent to the drive on open and	released on close, so that eject
	  buttons (when	present) are disabled.

ERROR RETURNS    [Toc]    [Back]

     The following errors are returned by this driver; other errors can	also
     be	returned by higher levels of the operating system.

     EAGAIN    The drive returned an error indicating it was not ready (tape
	       ejected,	drive taken offline, and so on).

     EBUSY     Returned	on opens when the drive	has already been opened.

     EFAULT    A bad address was passed	in a call that required	a data
	       transfer.

     EINVAL    This is returned	for requests that are invalid for one reason
	       or another including:

	       o  Attempting to	write or write file-mark after reading (except
		  in audio mode, for devices that support it) without an
		  intervening close, or	ioctl to re-position the tape.

	       o  Attempting to	read after writing (same exceptions as for
		  writing).

	       o  Using	an invalid count on read, write, write file-mark, and
		  so on.

	       o  Attempting to	do MTAFILE on a	drive that doesn't support it
		  (the MTCAN_APPEND bit	is not set in the master.d/scsi	file).

	       o  Attempting to	do an ioctl on a drive that doesn't support it
		  (such	as MTBSR on Cipher 540S) or attempting to do an
		  unsupported MTOP operation or	other unsupported ioctl's.






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	       o  Attempting to	write to a QIC24 cartridge from	a QIC150 drive
		  (an MTIOCGET should be done, and the *QIC* bits should be
		  checked for in mt_dposn to confirm this error).

	       o  Attempting to	do something when not at BOT that can only be
		  done at BOT, such as writing or reading a Kennedy tape drive
		  at a different speed than was	previously used	or switching
		  from the variable block size device to the fixed block size
		  device.  (In IRIX 4.0, an attempt to use a different density
		  is allowed, but the drive continues to use the original
		  density.)

	       o  Attempting to	perform	reads, writes, or ioctls other than
		  MTIOCGET on the {stat} device.

     EIO       A generic error occurred, such as a SCSI	bus reset,
	       unrecoverable media error, and so on.  Also occurs on close or
	       read/write if the media has been	unloaded while the device is
	       open.

     ENOMEM    An attempt was made to read data	with a count less than that at
	       which the block was written.  This can only happen with drives
	       that support variable block sizes.  It can also occur if	the
	       kernel memory allocator is not able to allocate memory for the
	       driver structures, or the request exceeds maxdmasize for	the
	       system.

     ENOSPC    Occurs on read or space commands	that encounter end of tape or
	       end of data, on writes that are attempted at end	of tape, and
	       also on some other commands that	encounter EOT or EOD.

     EROFS     A write or write	file-mark was attempted	to a write-protected
	       tape.

     ENODEV    An open was attempted on	a device with an invalid SCSI
	       controller or SCSI ID specified (that is, a mknod with the
	       wrong arguments was used	to create the device special file) or
	       an attempt to open a tape in variable blocksize mode when the
	       device doesn't support it.  Also	occurs when the	SCSI inquiry
	       command fails or	returns	indicating that	the device is not a
	       tape device (media not removable, or not	a sequential access
	       device).

NOTES    [Toc]    [Back]

     High density tape cartridges such as the DC6150 (originally called	600
     XTD) written on a system equipped with QIC	150 tape drives	can NOT	be
     read on older systems.  Even if a low density tape	(such as DC 600A) is
     used, it is still written at a higher density (QIC	120) than older	tape
     drives can	read.  Tapes written on	the older systems can still be read on
     the new tape drives, however.  Systems with QIC 150 cartridge tape	drives
     such as the Personal IRIS are able	to read	QIC24 tapes (310 oersted) such
     as	the DC 300XL, but are not able to write	them.



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     All tape devices other than the QIC (quarter-inch)	tape drives have
     /dev/tape linked to the {ns} device for performance, since	there is no
     compatibility issue, and byte swapping is done in software.  Most newer
     drives support variable block size	devices, and the /dev/tape link	uses
     those by default; when multiple densities are supported, as with 9-track,
     the link is to the	highest	capacity device.  For compatibility with
     earlier IRIX releases, the	8mm device is linked to	the fixed block
     device.  See the (unfortunately somewhat confusing) script	/dev/MAKEDEV
     for details; in particular, look at the tapelinks target.

     Each time the tape	drive is closed	and the	drive has reported recovered
     error, the	driver reports to the console and (as normally configured) to
     /var/adm/SYSLOG the number	of recovered errors, if	any.  A	small number
     is	not indicative of problems, but	a large	number (somewhere above	about
     2-5% errors as a percentage of I/Os, depending on media age and quality)
     probably indicates	that the media is approaching the end of its lifetime,
     that the drive read/write heads are dirty,	or that	the heads need to be
     realigned.	 A typical recovered error message might look like:

	  NOTICE: tps0d7 had 8 successfully retried commands (1% of r/w)

     The first number is the controller	number,	the second is the SCSI ID on
     that controller.

     It	is important to	realize	that these are recovered errors	(at the	drive
     level) and	therefore do not result	in errors being	reported to the
     program doing the tape I/O.

     It	should be noted	that the reported percentage of	retried	errors for
     some devices, most	notably	EXABYTE, may be	shown to be orders of
     magnitude larger than the actual number of	I/Os. This is not necessarily
     indicative	of a serious problem when one realizes how this	value is
     derived. The EXABYTE 8505,	for example, when returning the	number of
     retried I/Os will report the number of retried 1Kbyte blocks, and hence
     an	alarmingly large reported percentage of	retried	errors.

     With more recent versions of microcode, the Ampex DIS/DST series of
     drives support variable length blocks. These should be detected as	such
     and the appropriate device	names created. It is important to note that
     even though variable blocks are supported,	blocks smaller than 1,199,840
     bytes will	reduce cartridge capacity and throughput.

     Nine track	tape users wishing to read large blocks	(i.e. "gapless") tapes
     should obtain their drive from the	M4 Data	Corporation in Florida.	They
     should request the	"SGI Long Block" feature to insure that	the proper
     microcode is installed in the 9914	drive. These drives will identify
     themselves	as "SGI" for the vendor	and "GOLD SEAL"	for the	model.	The
     default master.d/scsi supplied by SGI includes a definition for this
     drive.  It	is also	important to check that	maxdmasize is set correctly
     for the system.





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tps(7M)								       tps(7M)


FILES    [Toc]    [Back]

     /dev/rmt/tps*
     /dev/rmt/*/lun*/c*p*
     /dev/mt	     exists as a symlink to /dev/rmt; the use of the /dev/mt
		     pathname is deprecated and	is supported only for
		     compatibility
     /dev/tape,	/dev/nrtape, /dev/tapens, /dev/nrtapens
		     convenience links to the "preferred" device in /dev/rmt
		     (highest SCSI ID on lowest	numbered SCSI bus, for tps
		     devices only)
     /var/sysgen/master.d/scsi
		     contains a	configuration table indicating what devices
		     support what features and what string should be matched
		     against the string	returned by the	SCSI inquiry command
		     and the hinv(1M) command; this was	formerly in
		     master.d/tpsc
     /dev/MAKEDEV    a makefile	(normally invoked by the superuser in the /dev
		     directory only) that creates devices that match the
		     installed tape drives if invoked as cd /dev; ./MAKEDEV
		     tape

SEE ALSO    [Toc]    [Back]

      
      
     MAKEDEV(1M), bru(1), cpio(1), hinv(1M), mt(1), tar(1), ioctl(2),
     rmtops(3),	datframe(4), mtio(7).


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