st01b and ffs
Derek E. Terveer
det at hawkmoon.MN.ORG
Tue Jan 8 10:55:14 AEST 1991
I thought the net would be interested in my experiences in installing
the updated driver just sent out by mike at cimcor.mn.org in articles:
<1991Jan2.010542.17298 at cimcor.mn.org>
<1991Jan2.010638.17353 at cimcor.mn.org>
<1991Jan2.010734.17412 at cimcor.mn.org>
in my esix 5.3.2-d system. I am running a Datacomp 386/25MHz with a wren iv
hanging off a scsi st-01 and a miniscribe 6085 off a (yuch!) wd1003 mfm
card. (I boot off of the mfm drive)
I was using the previous release of this driver and obtaining approximately
50k/sec transfer rate from the block device (raw device was not supported). I
could not use the ffs (on the scsi driver), since it was also not supported by
the old st-01 driver.
The beta version supports raw devices (for the most part, anyway) and the ffs,
so I backed up my wren iv, created a ffs on the drive and copied back the data.
The problems I encountered were:
1) 1024 byte sectors are not supported by the st-01 driver. So,
changing from 1024 to 512 byte sectors allowed me to create a ffs
but i lost 324M-313M = 11M of disk space. Oh well, at least i can
use the ffs now.
2) the default fs created by the newfs command (in /etc/ffs) is a sys
v directory format, so using the information gleaned from previous
articles, i tried running mkfs manually without the -S option and
all the other parameters intact (as shown by "newfs -v") in an
attempt to create a bsd file system (with 255 char file names
instead of 14). However, when the fs was built and i created a
long file name and then tried to reference it with a wild char,
i.e.:
touch abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz
rm abc*
rm: abc* non-existent
rm abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz
if the full name is specified, rm finds it, otherwise wild
characters don't seem to work (well, at least the "*" doesn't and
that was enough for me! -- i didn't test any other wild chars)
Sigh. Back to the system v file system.
If one runs "newfs -N /dev/.." on a fs just created as a bsd file
system, newfs (incorrectly?) reports that it is a system v fs.
So, i just used the default newfs command and built a sysv type fs on my wren
iv and everything seems to be working just fine. I am now getting between
approximately 100k/sec and 300k/sec rates (depending on load) with the command:
time dd if=/dev/dsk/5s0 of=/dev/null count=200 bs=8k
--
Derek "Tigger" Terveer det at hawkmoon.MN.ORG - MNFHA, NCS - UMN Women's Lax, MWD
I am the way and the truth and the light, I know all the answers; don't need
your advice. -- "I am the way and the truth and the light" -- The Legendary Pink Dots
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