Using the lto-3 tape drive – Quantum Tape Drive LTO-3 User Manual

Page 76

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Chapter 6 UNIX Settings
Configuring for Linux

62

LTO-3 Tape Drive User’s Guide

You may see output similar to:

(scsi0)<Adaptec AHA-294XX Ultra160 SCSI host
adapter> found at PCI 0/16/0

To find existing SCSI devices execute the command:

cat /proc/scsi/scsi

You may see output similar to:

Host: scsi0 Channel: 0 Id:6 Lun:00
Vendor: CERTANCE Model: ULTRIUM 3
Type: SequentialAccess ANSI SCSI Revision 04

Use the output of these two commands to see which SCSI target ID

numbers are free. In the above example a tape drive is attached at target

ID 6. SCSI ID #7 is almost always dedicated to the SCSI controller. Never

configure your target device for ID 7 unless you are absolutely sure that

the controller is not addressed for ID 7.
The widely available distributions of Linux automatically install the

proper SCSI and tape device drivers. If you executed the cat command

above, you have ensured that the SCSI driver for your controller is

installed. To view currently loaded modules, execute the lsmod

command. Ensure that one of the entries is st.
To view the st device number for your attached tape drive, execute the

command:

dmesg | grep tape

You should see output similar to:

Detected SCSI tape st0 and scsi0 . . .

Using the LTO-3
Tape Drive

6

The LTO-3 Tape Drive can be configured via the mt command options

and a default configuration can be setup using the

stsetoptions

command

from within the mt command. Refer to the man page for mt for details.

We suggest not using the erase command nor commands which attempt

to partition the tape. Partitioning is not supported in the LTO format.
For commands that use density and tape size settings, the tape density is

124,000 bpi and the tape length is 1800 feet. For commands that use a

blocking factor, we suggest a factor of 128.

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