HP Ultrium Tape Drive manual What Next?

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Data.UBYTE[0]

= 0x3D # Vendor Unique Page Code 3D

Data.UBYTE[1]

= 0x02

Data.UBYTE[2]

=

0x01

Data.UBYTE[3]

=

0x00

2.Rebuild the kernel by running /sbin/ddr_config, then reboot the system with the tape drive attached. The device files for the Ultrium drive will be generated in /dev/tape and / dev/ntape when you reboot.

3.The names of the device files can be interpreted as follows:

Devices in the /dev/ntape directory are “no-rewind” devices. Those in /dev/tape will do a rewind on close.

The device files then have the syntax: tapeX_dn

For example, /dev/ntape/tape66_d1 is a device file for device 66, no-rewind using density number 1. Since all density numbers have the same parameters it does not matter which density number file is used.

What Next?

Once the device files have been created, you should confirm that your new tape drive is working properly. Chapter 7, “Verifying the Installation” provides instructions on backing up and restoring a sample file to test your installation.

20 HP Alpha UNIX

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Contents Generation 3 drives Version Date Changes Contents Verifying the Installation Purpose of this manual Related documentsDocuments specific to HP Ultrium drives Documentation mapDrives-general Interface How error correction works General documents and standardizationTel 800 854 7179 or 714 261 Irvine, CAPage Backup Applications IntroductionUltrium Drives in a Library IntroductionHP-UX AIX HP-UX Systems HP Servers and Workstations-HP-UXIntroduction Determining the Scsi ID HP-UX SystemsSelect the following Creating the Device FilesFor an HP Ultrium drive, execute the following When you have exited sam, run ioscan to see the tape drive WhereTo create a device file with the following characteristics Run insf as follows Hardware path can be found from previous ioscan output For compressed mode default What Next? HP-UX Systems HP Alpha Unix HP Alpha UnixHP Alpha Unix Add the following entry to your /dev/ddr.dbase fileWhat Next? This will produce output that looks similar to Configuring the Device FilesDetermining the Scsi ID Device Filenames under AIX Configuring on Linux Systems LinuxDetermining the Scsi ID Linux LinuxThis should find a number of lines. One should look like Using the Seek and Tell Features of mt Where /dev/stp is the device fileLinux Sun Systems, Solaris 8, 9 Sun Systems, Solaris 8, 9This will produce output similar to the following This produces a list similar toDetermine the device file by typing Ls -l /dev/rmt/*m grep st@XHP-Data Values Do a reconfigure bootWhen the system is down, reboot Specifies the LUN for the device Values for the parameters for name are as followsSpecifies the Scsi ID target of the device Verifying the Installation Verifying the Installation of the Drive UnixTo verify the installation Verifying the InstallationFile The name of the file to archive, prefixed with ‘./’ Read the file back from tapeExtract the file from the tape Compare the original with the restored versionChange to the temporary directory Verifying the Installation Glossary GlossaryResponse to a filemark command Fibre Channel switching technologyFeatures required by that standard Point-to-point connection between itself and the fabricGlossary Glossary AIX IndexIndex Index