HELP: SGI 4D/360 EXABYTE problem: Command DD
Jeremy Higdon
jeremy at perf2.asd.sgi.com
Wed May 29 07:44:38 AEST 1991
In article <1991May27.192352.24630 at garfield.cs.mun.ca>, harold at odie.cs.mun.ca (Harold Wareham(Todd)) writes:
> We are having problems with an EXABYTE-8200 hooked up to an SGI-4D/360
> running SGI UNIX version 3.3.1. Specifically, we cannot read or write
> an EXABYTE tape using the command DD; however, we can create and read
> tapes using the command TAR. The drive was cleaned prior to the
> problems described in this message (the same day as the tests
> run below, in fact). To add strangeness to it all, one can use
> DD with a QIC drive, but it refuses to read back the last (partial)
> block from tape.
>
> Odd, yes? Details follow. If you have any ideas about what's going on,
> drop me a line.
>
> - Todd
>
> Todd Wareham harold at odie.cs.mun.ca |"Success in science depends not
> Department of Physics | only on rational argument but
> Memorial University of Newfoundland | on a mixture of subterfuge,
> St. John, NF, Canada | rhetoric, and propaganda"
> | - Feyerabed
>
> **************************** DETAILS *********************************
>
> Scripts of the various errors encountered are given below.
>
> The following is the script of trying to read from our EXABYTE
> drive (/dev/mt/tps0d6) a tape containing a single large file
> (20484 6000-byte records); just to be sure switching from byte-swapping
> to no byte-swapping reads was causing no problems, I popped the
> tape out between the read attempts.
>
> This tape was created at another EXABYTE drive on campus attached to a
> MIPS-120 running UNIX 4.3 BSD. This tape reads and writes fine (using
> DD) on that other system on that other drive.
>
>
> Script started on Mon May 27 15:08:34 1991
> % ls -l /dev/mt/tps0d6*
> crw-rw-rw- 3 root sys 23,192 May 27 14:15 /dev/mt/tps0d6
> crw-rw-rw- 3 root sys 23,193 May 27 13:57 /dev/mt/tps0d6nr
> crw-rw-rw- 3 root sys 23,195 Nov 7 1990 /dev/mt/tps0d6nrns
> crw-rw-rw- 3 root sys 23,194 May 27 14:15 /dev/mt/tps0d6ns
There are no variable mode devices in the /dev/mt directory, so the first
thing you have to do is create them. cd to /dev and execute the following:
./MAKEDEV tps
Then use /dev/mt/tps0d6nsv or /dev/mt/tps0d6nrnsv to talk to the Exabyte.
More information about the Comp.sys.sgi
mailing list