iustin / mt-st

Magnetic tape control tools for Linux SCSI tapes
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mt-st tools

This directory contains two programs; mt and stinit, used for dealing with Linux-specific tape-drive handling.

The project was authored and is copyright by Kai Mäkisara (Kai.Makisara@kolumbus.fi), and since version 1.2 is maintained by Iustin Pop (iustin@k1024.org). For copyright information, see the COPYING file.

For more information, bug reports and the source code repository, please see the project homepage at https://github.com/iustin/mt-st.

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mt

mt is basically a "standard" mt with additional commands to send the ioctls specific to the Linux SCSI tape driver. The source supports all SCSI tape ioctls up to kernel version 2.6.0 but it can also be compiled in kernels >= 2.0.x (and hopefully with 1.2.x). Although this mt program is tailored for SCSI tapes, it can also be used with other Linux tape drivers using the same ioctls (some of the commands may not work with all drivers).

stinit

The program stinit is meant for initializing of SCSI tape drive modes at system startup, when the tape driver module is loaded, or when new tape drivers are initialized using:

echo "scsi add-single-device x y z v" >/proc/scsi/scsi

or (with 2.6 kernels):

echo "y z v" > /sys/class/scsi_host/hostx/scan

where x=host y=channel z=id v=lun (- is wild card for 2.6).

The parameters used in initialization of a tape drive are fetched from a text file. The parameter file is indexed by the inquiry data returned by the drive, i.e., the parameters are defined by the drive manufacturer, model, etc. This means that the initialization for a drive does not depend on its hardware address. A similar method is used by most Unices either within the kernel or outside the kernel.

The contents of the configuration file and the command line parameters are defined in the man page stinit.8. A sample configuration file stinit.def.examples is included in this distribution. It can be used as example when writing descriptions for the tape drives in a system. NOTE that the examples by no means specify what are the "correct" parameters for different types of devices.

The program is configured for maximum of 32 tapes and 4 modes (the default Linux configuration). If the kernel is configured for different number of tape modes, the definitions MAX_TAPES and NBR_MODES in stinit.c should be configured accordingly. (With 8 bit minor numbers NBR_MODES * MAX_TAPES == 128.)

Contents

The files:

Installation

Really simple: