HP Hewlett Packard Portable Media Storage Q1538 90925 User Manual

HP Ultrium tape drives  
technical reference manual  
Generation 3 drives  
volume 5: UNIX configuration guide  
Part number: Q1538–90925 Volume 5  
Edition 6.4, May 2006  
HP restricted  
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Determining the SCSI ID . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23  
Configuring the Device Files . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23  
7 Verifying the Installation. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 27  
Verifying the Installation of the Drive (UNIX). . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 27  
To verify the installation:. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 27  
Example . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 28  
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Glossary . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 29  
Index . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 33  
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Related documents  
The following documents provide additional information:  
Documents specific to HP Ultrium drives  
Hardware Integration Guide, volume 1 of the HP Ultrium Technical Reference Manual  
Software Integration Guide, volume 2 of the HP Ultrium Technical Reference Manual  
SCSI Interface, volume 3 of the HP Ultrium Technical Reference Manual  
HP Ultrium Configuration Guide, volume 5 of the HP Ultrium Technical Reference Manual  
Background to Ultrium Drives, volume 6 of the HP Ultrium Technical Reference Manual  
Please contact your HP supplier for copies.  
The features and benefits of HP Ultrium drives are discussed in the HP Ultrium Technology White  
Paper.  
For a general background to LTO technology and licensing, go to  
Documentation map  
The following will help you locate information in the 6-volume Technical Reference Manual:  
Drives—general  
l
SCSI Drives  
FC Drives  
Connectors  
1 HW Integration: ch. 7 1 HW Integration: ch. 4  
6 Background: ch. 4  
Controller architecture  
Front Panel LEDs  
1 HW Integration: ch. 6 1 HW Integration: ch. 3  
6 Background: ch. 3  
Mechanism and hardware  
Specifications  
4 Specs  
Installation and configuration  
SCSI Drives  
FC Drives  
Connectors  
1 HW Integration: ch. 7 1 HW Integration: ch. 4  
2 SW Integration: ch. 2 2 SW Integration: ch. 2  
Determining the configuration  
External drives (SCSI only)  
In Libraries  
1 HW Integration: ch. 5  
n/a  
1 HW Integration: ch. 1  
In Servers (SCSI only)  
In Tape Arrays (SCSI only)  
Modes of Usage (SCSI only)  
1 HW Integration: ch. 4  
1 HW Integration: ch. 3  
1 HW Integration: ch. 8  
n/a  
n/a  
n/a  
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SCSI Drives  
FC Drives  
Optimizing performance (SCSI only) 1 HW Integration: ch. 8  
n/a  
2 SW Integration: ch. 4  
5 UNIX Config  
UNIX configuration  
Operation  
SCSI Drives  
FC Drives  
External drives (SCSI only)  
In Libraries  
1 HW Integration: ch. 5  
n/a  
1 HW Integration: ch. 1  
In Servers (SCSI only)  
In Tape Arrays (SCSI only)  
1 HW Integration: ch. 4  
1 HW Integration: ch. 3  
n/a  
n/a  
Cartridges  
SCSI Drives  
FC Drives  
Cartridge Memory (LTO-CM)  
2 SW Integration: ch. 5  
6 HW Integration: ch. 5  
1 HW Integration: ch. 9 1 HW Integration: ch. 5  
6 HW Integration: ch. 5  
Cartridges  
Features  
Managing the use of cartridges  
Use of cartridges  
2 SW Integration: ch. 1  
2 SW Integration: ch. 3  
Interface  
SCSI Drives  
FC Drives  
SCSI Guide  
Commands  
Error codes  
3 SCSI  
3 SCSI: ch. 4  
1 HW Integration: ch.  
10  
1 HW Integration: ch.  
6
Implementation  
Interpreting sense data  
Messages  
3 SCSI: ch. 1  
2 SW Integration: ch. 3  
3 SCSI: ch. 2  
Mode pages  
—see the MODE SENSE command  
3 SCSI: ch. 4  
Pre-execution checks  
3 SCSI: ch. 3  
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SCSI Drives  
2 SW Integration: ch. 6  
3 SCSI: ch. 4  
FC Drives  
Responding to Sense Keys and ASC/Q  
Sense Keys and ASC/Q  
—see REQUEST SENSE command  
Maintenance and troubleshooting  
Cleaning  
SCSI Drives  
FC Drives  
2 SW Integration: ch. 5  
2 SW Integration: ch. 7  
External drives (SCSI only)  
In Libraries  
1 HW Integration: ch. 5  
n/a  
1 HW Integration: ch. 1  
In Servers (SCSI only)  
1 HW Integration: ch. 4  
1 HW Integration: ch. 3  
2 SW Integration: ch. 7  
n/a  
In Tape Arrays (SCSI only)  
Monitoring drive and tape condition  
Software troubleshooting techniques  
n/a  
2 SW Integration: ch. 1  
Dealing with errors  
SCSI Drives  
FC Drives  
Error Codes  
1 HW Integration: ch. 10 1 HW Integration: ch. 6  
2 SW Integration: ch. 5  
6 Background: ch. 4  
Handling errors  
How error correction works  
Logs—see the LOG SENSE command  
Recovering from write and read errors  
Software response to error correction  
Software response to logs  
TapeAlert log  
3 SCSI: ch. 4  
2 SW Integration: ch. 7  
2 SW Integration: ch. 3  
2 SW Integration: ch. 3  
2 SW Integration: ch. 7  
Ultrium features  
SCSI Drives  
FC Drives  
Adaptive Tape Speed (ATS)  
Autoload  
6 Background: ch. 1  
1 HW Integration: ch. 2  
Automation Control Interface (ACI)  
1 HW Integration: ch. 2  
6 Background: ch. 1  
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SCSI Drives  
FC Drives  
Cartridge Memory (LTO-CM)s  
1 HW Integration: ch. 2  
2 SW Integration: ch. 5  
6 HW Integration: ch. 5  
Data Compression, how it works  
Data Compression, managing  
Design principles  
6 Background: ch. 5  
2 SW Integration: ch. 5  
6 Background: ch. 1  
OBDR and CD-ROM emulation  
6 Background: ch. 1  
2 SW Integration: ch. 7  
Performance optimization  
1 HW Integration: ch. 8  
n/a  
2 SW Integration: ch. 1  
2 SW Integration: ch. 4  
2 SW Integration: ch. 1  
2 SW Integration: ch. 5  
6 Background: ch. 2  
Performance, factors affecting  
Software design  
Supporting Ultrium features  
Ultrium Format  
General documents and standardization  
See http://www.t10.org/t10_main.htm for INCITS SCSI Primary Commands—3 (SPC-3) and other  
specifications  
Copies of documents of other standards bodies can be obtained from:  
INCITS  
11 West 42nd Street  
New York,  
NY 10036-8002  
USA  
ISO  
CP 56  
CH-1211 Geneva 20  
Switzerland  
ECMA  
114 Rue du Rhône  
CH-1204 Geneva  
Switzerland  
Tel: +41 22 849 6000  
Global Engineering  
Documents  
2805 McGaw  
Irvine, CA 92714  
USA  
Tel: 800 854 7179 or 714 261 1455  
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1 Introduction  
Purpose of this manual  
This manual provides basic information on configuring the drives with various operating systems.  
See the top-level release notes that accompany the drive for expected functionality and features.  
Ultrium drives are supported on the following platforms:  
HP UNIX systems (HP-UX) (Chapter 2)  
HP Alpha UNIX (Chapter 3)  
IBM (AIX) (Chapter 4)  
Linux (Chapter 5)  
Sun Systems, Solaris 8, 9, 10 (Chapter 6)  
For platforms not mentioned here, contact HP because there may be new connectivity details  
available that arrived after the release notes were published.  
See Chapter 7 for details of how to verify the installation.  
Ultrium drives in a library  
Although Ultrium drives may also be used in a library, instructions about installing device drivers for  
automatic robotics are not included in this manual.  
Backup applications  
For optimum performance it is important to use a backup application that supports the drive’s  
features within your system’s configuration. See the Getting Started Guide for more information  
about usage models.  
The following applications are suitable for use within an Enterprise environment and have been  
tested with Ultrium drives. They use the operating system’s standard, built-in device drivers, as  
described in this manual. For further information about optimizing performance and making full use  
of the drive’s functions, contact the software manufacturer or HP.  
HP-UX  
yes  
yes  
AIX  
yes  
yes  
yes  
Sun, Solaris  
Linux  
yes  
1
HP Omniback  
yes  
yes  
yes  
Legato Networker  
Veritas NetBackup  
yes  
2
yes  
yes  
1. Cell Manager is only available on HP-UX or Windows  
2. Redhat Server only (not Caldera, SUSE, and so on)  
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2 HP-UX systems  
HP servers and workstations—HP-UX 11.x  
NOTE: HP-UX 10.x is only supported by Generation 1 Ultrium drives.  
Introduction  
Before you install your tape drive log on to the HP web site, www.hp.com, and download the latest  
hardware enablement patch bundle for your operating system. This ensures that you will have the  
correct device driver for your tape drive.  
Determining attached devices  
After you have installed the new tape drive, you can check it has been attached successfully. From a  
shell window (hpterm/xterm), execute ioscanto display the list of attached devices.  
# /sbin/ioscan -C tape -fn  
The output should look similar to the following:  
Class  
I H/W Path  
Driver  
S/W State H/W Type Description  
=================================================================================  
bc  
bc  
ba  
ext_bus  
target  
ctl  
lan  
ba  
0
1 8  
0 8/0  
1 8/0/2/0  
0 8/0/2/0.7  
1 8/0/2/0.7.0 sctl  
0 8/0/20/0  
1 8/16  
root  
bc  
GSCtoPCI  
c720  
tgt  
CLAIMED BUS_NEXUS  
CLAIMED BUS_NEXUS Psudo Bus Converter  
CLAIMED BUS_NEXUS GSCtoPCI Bridge  
CLAIMED INTERFACE SCSI C895 Ultra2 Wide LVD  
CLAIMED DEVICE  
CLAIMED DEVICE  
CLAIMED INTERFACE PCI(10110019) -- Built-in #1  
bus_adapter CLAIMED BUS_NEXUS Core I/O Adapter  
Initiator  
btlan3  
tty  
0 8/16/4  
2 8/16/5  
1 8/16/5.5  
0 8/16/5.5.0 sdisk  
2 8/16/5.7 tgt  
2 8/16/5.7.0 sctl  
asio0  
c720  
tgt  
CLAIMED INTERFACE Built-in RS-232C  
CLAIMED INTERFACE Built-in SCSI  
CLAIMED DEVICE  
ext_bus  
target  
disk  
target  
ctl  
CLAIMED DEVICE  
CLAIMED DEVICE  
CLAIMED DEVICE  
SEAGATE ST34573N  
Initiator  
processor 0 62  
processor  
memory  
stape  
CLAIMED PROCESSOR Processor  
memory  
tape  
0 63  
4 2/0/1.5.0  
CLAIMED MEMORY  
CLAIMED DEVICE  
Memory  
HP Ultrium 3-SCSI  
NOTE: If you are installing the drive onto a Storage Area Network (SAN), the fibre channel/SCSI  
bridge will also appear in the list of attached devices.  
Adding stape and schgr (autoloader driver) to the kernel using sam  
Run the `sam` utility from the command line. Sam runs as a mouse driven GUI (fig. 1) on a system  
with full graphics capability, or as a console text-based interface (fig. 2). If using the text-based  
interface, use the tab and arrow keys to navigate, and the return key to select.  
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Figure 1 SAM GUI  
Figure 2 SAM text-based interface  
For HP-UX 11.11 (11i version 1)  
1. Enter samat the command line.  
2. Select the following:  
Kernel Configuration  
Drivers  
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3. Highlight the stapeor schgrdriver. If the driver has not been added to the kernel, both  
Current State and Pending State will read “Out.  
4. Select the following:  
Actions  
Add Driver to Kernel  
The Pending State will now read “In.  
5. To add the new driver to the kernel, select:  
Actions  
Create a New Kernel  
The stapeor schgrdriver is added to the kernel.  
6. Reboot the system.  
For HP-UX 11.23 (11i version 2)  
1. Enter sam at the command line.  
2. Select the following:  
Kernel Configuration  
Kernel Configuration  
Modules  
3. Highlight the stapeor schgrdriver. If the driver has not been added to the kernel, both  
Current State and Planned State will read “unused.  
4. Type “m” to modify the stape driver and “s” to set it to “static. The Planned State will now read  
“static.  
5. Change schgrto “static” if you are going to attach an autoloader.  
6. The stapeand schgrdrivers are now added to the kernel.  
7. Reboot the system.  
Add device files using sam  
This is the recommended and simplest way to create device files. To add devices, proceed as  
follows:  
1. # sam  
This will bring up the graphical user interface for the utility.  
2. Select the following:  
Peripheral Devices  
Tape Drives  
samwill then scan the system for any tape drives connected.  
Hardware Path  
===========================================================  
8/0/2/0.3.0 stape HP Ultrium 3-SCSI  
Driver  
Description  
3. Highlight the drive and select the following from the tool bar:  
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Actions  
Create Device Files  
Create Default Device Files  
This will create default device files for the drive. To view the device files that have been created,  
select:  
Actions  
Create Device Files  
Show Device Files  
4. When you have exited sam, run ioscanto see the tape drive:  
%/sbin/ioscan -C tape -fn  
All default device files displayed have compression enabled.  
NOTE: HP recommends the ‘Berkeley’ device files of most applications:  
cXtYdZBESTnb= Berkeley, no rewind, best available density  
cXtYdZBESTb= Berkeley, with rewind, best available density  
where:  
Y= target number  
Z= LUN number  
What next?  
Once device files have been created, you should confirm that your new tape drive is working  
properly. Chapter 7 on page 27 provides instructions on backing up and restoring a sample file to  
test your installation.  
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3 HP alpha UNIX  
HP alpha UNIX 5.x  
1. Add the following entry to your /dev/ddr.dbase file:  
SCSIDEVICE  
Type = tape  
Name = “HP” “Ultrium”  
#
PARAMETERS:  
TypeSubClass  
BlockSize  
= lto  
= 262144  
= 0  
# Linear Tape Open  
TagQueueDepth  
MaxTransferSize  
ReadyTimeSeconds  
SyncTransfers  
WideTransfers  
InquiryLength  
= 0xffffff # 16Mb - 1  
= 120  
# Seconds  
= enabled  
= enabled  
= 0x20  
DENSITY:  
DensityNumber  
OneFileMarkOnClose = yes  
= 0,1,2,3,4,5,6,7  
DensityCode  
Blocking  
= 0x44  
= 0  
CompressionCode  
Buffered  
= 1  
= 1  
Speed  
= 0  
MODESELECT:  
ModeSelectNumber  
SavePage  
= 0  
= No  
PageFormat  
= scsi2  
= yes  
= 16  
BlockDescriptor  
TransferLength  
Hdr.Tape.BufferMode = 0x1  
Hdr.MediumType  
Data.UBYTE[0]  
Data.UBYTE[1]  
Data.UBYTE[2]  
Data.UBYTE[3]  
= 0  
= 0x3D # Vendor Unique Page Code 3D  
= 0x02  
= 0x01  
= 0x00  
2. Rebuild the kernel by running /sbin/ddr_config, then reboot the system with the tape drive  
attached.DevicefilesfortheUltriumdrivewillbegeneratedin/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  
perform rewind on close.  
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The device files then have the syntax: tapeX_dn  
Forexample, /dev/ntape/tape66_d1 isadevicefilefordevice66,no-rewindusingdensity  
number 1. Since all density numbers have the same parameters it does not matter which density  
number file is used.  
What next?  
Once device files have been created, you should confirm that your new tape drive is working  
properly. Chapter 7 on page 27 provides instructions on backing up and restoring a sample file to  
test your installation.  
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4 IBM (AIX)  
Determining the SCSI ID  
Before you configure your system to support Ultrium drives, determine which SCSI ID to use. IDs must  
be unique for each device attached to the SCSI bus. To list existing devices, use the following  
command:  
% lsdev -C |grep SCSI  
This produces output similar to:  
scsi0 Available 00-00-0S Standard SCSI I/O Controller  
hdisk0 Available 10-60-00-0,0 16 Bit LVD SCSI Disk Drive  
rmt1 Defined 00-00-0S-2,0 Other SCSI Tape Drive  
The SCSI ID is in the series 00-00-0S-X,0, where X is the SCSI ID. Review the list of existing SCSI  
IDs and choose an available ID to assign to the new tape drive.  
Configuring the device files  
To install an HP Ultrium drive on an IBM workstation, create the appropriate device files for the  
drive.  
NOTE: Do not choose the smit option of “4mm2gb” as the Tape Device Type. This is reserved for  
Connor drives. If you use it with HP drives, you will get the error “Device to be configured  
doesnotmatchthephysicaldeviceatthespecifiedconnectionlocation.  
To change to variable block mode, use the following procedure:  
1. If you are using a graphics terminal running X-Windows, at a Windows terminal, type:  
smit tape  
If you are using a non-graphics terminal, at the command line type:  
% smit -C tape  
2. If no device has been configured at this address before, select “add a tape drive” to set up  
theaddress. Fromthepop-upwindow, selectost” orOther SCSI tape driveas the tape  
drive you wish to change and choose connection addresses as appropriate.  
3. Set maximum delay for the READ/WRITE command=1200.  
4. Change the block size field to 0, and click on the “DO” button or press [Enter] to apply the  
change.  
HP Ultrium drives will work with tar, cpio, backup, restoreand dd. For systems other than the  
43P, the drive is also boot-capable, provided a boot tape is generated using mkszfileand  
mksysb.  
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Once device files have been created, you should confirm that your new tape drive is working  
properly. Chapter 7 on page 27 provides instructions on backing up and restoring a sample file to  
test your installation.  
Device filenames under AIX  
Use device filenames as listed below for the combination of Rewind on Close, Retension on Open,  
and Compression that you want:  
Filename  
Rewind on Close  
Retension on Open Compression  
/dev/rmtn  
Yes  
No  
Yes  
No  
Yes  
No  
Yes  
No  
No  
No  
Yes  
Yes  
No  
No  
Yes  
Yes  
enabled  
enabled  
enabled  
enabled  
disabled  
disabled  
disabled  
disabled  
/dev/rmtn.1  
/dev/rmtn.2  
/dev/rmtn.3  
/dev/rmtn.4  
/dev/rmtn.5  
/dev/rmtn.6  
/dev/rmtn.7  
The n in the filename is the instance number assigned to the drive by the operating system, where 0  
is the first device, 1 is the second and so on.  
Rewind on Close  
Normally, the drive repositions the tape to BOT (Beginning of Tape) when the  
device file is closed. Using the no rewind option is useful when creating and  
reading tapes that contain multiple files.  
Retension on Open Retensioning consists of winding to EOT (End of Tape) and then rewinding to  
BOT, in order to reduce errors. If this option is selected, the tape is positioned  
at BOT as part of the open process.  
Compression  
Compression can be disabled or enabled.  
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5 Linux  
Determining the SCSI ID (Linux)  
Look at the output of dmesgto find out what SCSI channel number is used for each connection.  
To find out the SCSI IDs in use on each channel, type:  
cat /proc/scsi/scsi  
This will produce output similar to the following for each device:  
Attached Devices  
Host: SCSI0 Channel: 00 Id:00 Lun:00  
Vendor: HP Model ------------  
Type: Direct-Access ANSI SCSI Revision 02  
Look at the ID information to establish which IDs are in use.  
Configuring on Linux systems  
No changes are needed to support Ultrium on Linux platforms, however you should ensure that you  
have the relevant drivers loaded.  
To see the device drivers loaded currently, execute lsmod. This will give output similar to:  
Module  
sgm  
Size  
Used by  
4376  
1
0
1
1
0
1
2
ide-scsi  
lockd  
7200  
30792  
53316  
24656  
52096  
136184  
sunrpc  
st  
sym53c8xx  
aic7xxx  
The lines of interest here are:  
st The tape driver. Its presence shows that the tape driver is loaded.  
sym53c8xx The SCSI chipset driver for the LSI Logic family of HBAs (amongst others).  
aic7xxx The SCSI chipset driver for the Adaptec 7xxx chipset family (such as Adaptec  
29160LP).  
Latest SCSI controller drivers for Linux are available from the manufacturer’s web site.  
and the underlying transport mechanism (the host bus adaptor) loaded. Ensure that both are  
available as either loadable modules (for example, usable with insmodand visible with lsmod) or  
are statically built into your kernel.  
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NOTE: To add drivers to the statically built kernel you need the Linux source code available on disk  
and knowledge of how to use the kernel building tools that ship with various Linux distributions. This  
should not be attempted by novice users.  
In order to determine if the drive has been detected by the tape driver at module load time, execute:  
dmesg | grep "st"  
This should find a number of lines. One should look like:  
Detected SCSI tape st0 at scsi1, channel 0, id 5, lun 0  
To load the tape driver module if it is not loaded as above, execute:  
insmod st  
to load it. This should happen naturally if your system is rebooted after attaching the drive.  
When the STdriver module has been added, a list of tape device files will be created automatically.  
They reside in the /dev/directory and have the syntax:  
/dev/stp or dev/nstp  
where:  
Instance number of the device file (if only one drive is connected to the system, this will be 0)  
Indicates this is a no-rewind driver.  
p
n
To enable large transfers under Linux (>64 KB per write), edit the file  
/usr/src/linux/drivers/scsi/st_options.hand change the definition of  
ST_BUFFER_BLOCKS.  
If you want requests to space to end of data (EOD) to be faster, you should also enable  
ST_FAST_MTEOMin the same file. After changing this file, rebuild the modules and install the new  
binary. At the very least, this requires:  
make modules  
make modules_install  
from the /usr/src/linuxdirectory. See your kernel documentation.  
Using the seek and tell features of mt  
To use the seek and tell features of mt, you must tell the stdriver that HP Ultrium drives use logical  
block addressing:  
mt -f <device file> stsetoptions scsi2logical  
where /dev/stpis the device file.  
Note however that this information is not preserved across reboots, so you need to execute this  
command each time the system comes up. The stinitutility offers a convenient way of handling  
this; see the relevant manpage for more information. If you use this approach, set the manufacturer  
parameter to HPand the model to “Ultrium 3-SCSI.  
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What next?  
Once device files have been created, you should confirm that your new tape drive is working  
properly. Chapter 7 on page 27 provides instructions on backing up and restoring a sample file to  
test your installation.  
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6 Sun Systems, Solaris 8, 9, 10  
Determining the SCSI ID  
Before you configure your system to support an HP Ultrium drive, determine which SCSI ID to use.  
IDs must be unique for each device on attached to the SCSI bus.  
1. Use the modinfo command to identify SCSI controller drivers installed on the system:  
% modinfo | grep "HBA Driver"  
This produces output similar to the following:  
106 780a0000 102b3 50  
1 glm (GLM SCSI HBA Driver)  
110 780b4000 1272c 228 1 qus (isp10160 HBA Driver)  
For the adapter to which the new tape drive is attached, you need to determine what SCSI IDs  
are already used.  
2. Determine the SCSI IDs of existing devices attached to the SCSI controller:  
For all adapters:  
% dmesg | egrep ".*xxx.*target" | sort | uniq  
where xxx = the type of adapter (esp, glm, fas, qus or isp), as appropriate.  
For example, for an ESP-based adapter:  
% dmesg | egrep ".*esp.*target" | sort | uniq  
This produces a list similar to:  
sd0 at esp0: target 0 lun 0 sd6 at esp0: target 6 lun 0  
This indicates that SCSI IDs 0 and 6 are used for existing devices. SCSI ID 7 is generally used for  
the adapter itself. Here, you would choose a SCSI ID from 1 to 5 for the new tape drive.  
Configuring the Device Files  
Determine the device file by typing:  
% ls -l /dev/rmt/*m | grep "st@X"  
where X is the SCSI ID. Identify the line for the tape drive. For example, if the drive was at SCSI ID  
2, look for the line containing “st@2,0. This might be as follows (but on a single line):  
lrwxrwxrwx 1 root root 63 Mar 1 00:00 /dev/rmt/0m  
../../devices/sbus@1f,0/espdma@e,8400000/esp@e, 8800000/st@2,0:m  
Here you could use /dev/rmt/0m(shown underlined above) as the device file.  
For optimal performance, ensure that you have the following minimum patch number:  
Minimum patch  
Solaris 8  
Solaris 9  
108725-18  
113277-27  
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If for some reason you cannot upgrade to the minimum patch level, you can make the following file  
modifications to enhance performance:  
1. In the file /kernel/drv/st.conf, after these lines:  
########  
# Copyright (c) 1992, by Sun Microsystems, Inc.  
#ident "@(#)st.conf  
1.6  
93/05/03 SMI"  
add the following depending on which version of operating system you are installing (there are  
6 significant spaces between HP and Ultrium in line 2):  
for Solaris 8 without st patch:  
tape-config-list =  
"HP  
Ultrium 3","HP Ultrium LTO 3","HP_LTO_GEN_3";  
HP_LTO_GEN_3 = 1,0x36,0,0xd639,4,0x44,0x44,0x44,0x44,3;  
name="st" class="scsi"  
target=X lun=0;  
where Xis the SCSI target address of the device you have attached.  
tape-config-list =  
"HP  
Ultrium 3","HP Ultrium LTO 3","HP_LTO_GEN_3";  
HP_LTO_GEN_3 = 2,0x3B,0,0x18659,4,0x44,0x44,0x44,0x44,3,60,1200,  
600,1200,600,600,18000;  
name="st" class="scsi"  
target=X lun=0;  
where Xis the SCSI target address of the device you have attached.  
See “HP-Data Values” on page 25 below for the values of the parameters in these lines.  
2. If you are replacing an existing tape device on the same SCSI ID, remove the contents of the  
/dev/rmt directory as follows:  
% cd /dev/rmt  
% rm *  
3. Do a reconfigure boot:  
% cd /  
% touch /reconfigure  
% sync;halt  
4. When the system is down, reboot:  
% boot -r  
Make sure you include the -rswitch, so that the device directory is reconfigured using the new  
data.  
5. You should now be able to use the drive.  
• Use /dev/rmt/Xcbif you require a compression rewind device file, where X is the relevant  
device address.  
• Use /dev/rmt/Xcbnwhen you require a compression non-rewind device.  
Once the device files have been created, you should confirm that your new tape drive is working  
properly. Chapter 7 on page 27 provides instructions on backing up and restoring a sample file to  
test your installation.  
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HP-Data Values  
The values for HP_LTO_GEN_nand name, which provide normal LTO mode, have the following  
meanings:  
The syntax for HP_LTO_GEN_non Solaris 9 is:  
<drivetype>=<version>,<type>,<bsize>,<options>, <no.ofdensities>,  
<density 0>, <density 1>, <density 2>, <density 3>, <default density>,  
<non-motion timeout>, <read/write timeout>, <rewind timeout>,  
<space timeout>, <load timeout>, <unload timeout>, <erase timeout>  
where:  
Parameter  
Value  
Meaning  
<version> 1 or 2  
Indicates the format of the following parameters.  
<type>  
0x36or ThevalueforanUltriumdrivein/usr/include/sys/mtio.h. For  
0x3B  
Solaris 8, 0x36indicates a type of MT_ISOTHER. Later versions of  
Solaris support the value 0x3Bwhich indicates a type of MT_LTO.  
<bsize>  
0
Indicates variable block size.  
<options> 0xd639or This value is derived from constants provided in  
0x18659 /usr/include/sys/scsi/targets/stdef.h. The value  
determines which operations the driver can perform with the attached  
device by using a unique value for each feature and then adding  
them together to form the options value. Supported features will vary  
with OS revision, and may include the following:  
0x001 Device supports variable length records.  
0x008 Device can backspace over files (as in the ‘mt bsf’ option).  
0x010 Device supports backspace record (as in ‘mt bsr’).  
0x020 Device requires a long time-out period for erase functions.  
0x040 Device will automatically determine the tape density.  
0x0200 Device knows when end of data has been reached.  
0x0400 Device driver is unloadable.  
0x1000 Time-outs five times longer than normal.  
0x4000 Driver buffers write requests and pre-acknowledges success  
to application.  
0x8000 Variable record size not limited to 64 KB.  
0x10000 Device determines which of the two mode pages the device  
supports for selecting or deselecting compression.  
long timeouts for erase, EOD recognition, Unloadable device driver, 5  
x longer timeouts, buffer writes and pre-acknowledge sucess, variable  
records not limited to 64 KB, auto-density over-ride and MODE SELECT  
compression.  
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Parameter  
Value  
Meaning  
<no. of  
densities>  
4
There are four densities following in the parameter list.  
<densityn> 0x00  
<density3> 0x44  
Creates a device file with compression disabled.  
The density code for data compression enabled by default.  
Density 3 (0x44) is the default for Generation 3 drives.  
<default  
density>  
3
<Xtimeout>  
All timeouts are in seconds  
Values for the parameters for nameare as follows:  
Parameter  
target  
lun  
Value  
X
Meaning  
X specifies the SCSI ID (target) of the device.  
Specifies the LUN for the device.  
0
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7 Verifying the Installation  
Verifying the Installation of the Drive (UNIX)  
As part of the installation process, you will have installed the appropriate device driver for your  
UNIX system, and created device files to communicate with the tape drive.  
This section describes how you can verify the installation has been performed correctly.  
In outline, the procedure is as follows:  
1. Check the tape drive responds to a rewind command.  
2. Write test data to a tape.  
3. Read the test data from the tape.  
4. Compare the data read from the tape with the original data on disk.  
To verify the installation:  
1. Test the SCSI connection to the tape drive by performing a rewind:  
a. If there is a tape cartridge already in the drive, remove it.  
b. Insert a tape cartridge.  
c. Rewind the tape using the command line:  
% mt -f <device file> rewind  
For example, on HP-UX:  
% mt -f /dev/rmt/0mnb rewind  
If the command completes successfully, there will be no feedback. If it fails, you will see an error  
message on the console. The hardware installation may be faulty. Check the troubleshooting  
section of the User’s Guide for help in identifying the problem.  
2. Write a sample file to tape, using ‘tar’:  
% cd /  
% tar cvf <device file> <file>  
The options to tarhave the following meanings:  
c
v
f
Create a new archive (backup file) on the device.  
Operate in verbose mode.  
Specify the device file explicitly.  
The arguments follow the cvfoptions in the command line. Their values depend on the  
arguments are as follows:  
<devicefile> The name of the device file for the drive.  
Example: /dev/rmt/0m  
<file>  
The name of the file to archive, prefixed with ‘./.  
Example: ./stand/vmunix  
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NOTE: Make sure you prefix the file name with ‘.’ when you back it up to tape. If you do not, the  
restore operation in step 3 will overwrite the original copy on disk.  
3. Read the file back from tape:  
% cd /tmp  
% tar xvf <device file>  
The ‘x’ option to tarhere means “extract from the archive.  
Use the same value for the <device file> argument as in step 2.  
4. Compare the original with this retrieved file:  
% cmp <original file> /tmp/<retrieved file>  
This compares the files byte by byte. If they are the same, there should be no output, and this  
verifies that the installation is correct. The arguments are:  
<original file> The name of the original file, prefixed with ‘/.  
Example: /stand/vmunix  
<retrievedfile> The name of the file retrieved from the archive.  
Example: stand/vmunix  
Example  
Suppose you are verifying the installation of an HP Ultrium tape drive on an HP-UX 11.X system. The  
procedure would be as follows.:  
1. Change directory to root:  
% cd /  
2. Back up /stand/vmunixto tape:  
% tar cvf /dev/rmt/0m ./stand/vmunix  
Note the prefix of ‘.’ to the filename.  
3. Change to the temporary directory:  
% cd /tmp  
4. Extract the file from the tape:  
% tar xvf /dev/rmt/0m  
5. Compare the original with the restored version:  
% cmp /stand/vmunix /tmp/stand/vmunix  
Note that the original filename is not prefixed with ‘..  
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Glossary  
AT&T mode  
Berkeley and AT&T functional modes differ in “read-only” close functionality. In AT&T  
mode, a device close operation will cause the tape to be repositioned just after next  
filemark on the tape (the start of the next file).  
Berkeley mode  
Berkeley and AT&T functional modes differ in “read-only” close functionality. In  
Berkeley mode the tape position will remain unchanged by a device close operation.  
BOT  
Beginning Of Tape. The first point on the tape that can be accessed by the drive.  
buffered mode  
A mode of data transfer in write operations that facilitates tape streaming. It is selected  
by setting the Buffered Mode Field to 1 in the SCSI MODE SELECT Parameter List  
header.  
compression  
A procedure in which data is transformed by the removal of redundant information in  
order to reduce the number of bits required to represent the data. This is basically  
done by representing strings of bytes with codewords.  
In Ultrium drives, the data is compressed using the LTO-DC compression format which  
is based on ALDC (licensed from Stac/IBM) with two enhancements. One limits the  
increase in size of data that cannot be compressed that ALDC produces. The other is  
the use of embedded codewords.  
data transfer phase On a SCSI bus, devices put in requests to be able to transfer information. Once a  
device is granted its request, it and the target to which it wants to send information can  
transfer the data using one of three protocols (assuming both devices support them):  
asynchronous, synchronous, and wide.  
In asynchronous transfers, the target controls the flow of data. The initiator can only  
send data when the target has acknowledged receipt of the previous packet. All SCSI  
devices must support asynchronous transfer.  
In synchronous data transfer, the initiator and target work in synchronization, allowing  
transmission of a packet of data to start before acknowledgment of the previous  
transmission.  
In wide (16-bit) data transfer, two bytes are transferred at the same time instead of a  
single byte.  
HP Ultrium drives support asynchronous, synchronous and narrow (8-bit) wide  
transfers.  
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fibre channel  
Fibre Channel provides an inexpensive yet expendable means of quickly transferring  
data between workstations, mainframes, supercomputers, desktop computers, storage  
devices, displays and other peripherals. Although it is called Fibre Channel, its  
architecture represents neither a channel nor a real network topology. It allows for an  
active intelligent interconnection scheme, called a fabric, to connect devices. All a  
Fibre Channel port has to do is to manage a simple point-to-point connection between  
itself and the fabric.  
Several common ULPs (Upper Level Protocols) including IP and SCSI can run on Fibre  
Channel, merging high-speed I/O and network functionality in a single connectivity  
technology.  
filemark  
A mark written by the host to the tape that can be searched for, often using the drive’s  
fast-search capability. It does not necessarily separate files. It is up to the host to assign  
a meaning to the mark.  
immediate mode  
A mode of responding to SCSI commands where the drive or other peripheral does not  
wait until the command has finished before returning status information back to the  
host. For writing filemarks, Immediate mode can significantly improve the performance  
of systems that do not set the Immediate bit when sending a SCSI WRITE FILEMARKS  
command. On the other hand, data is not flushed to tape in response to a filemark  
command.  
infinite flush  
By default, the buffer in the drive is flushed every 5 seconds. Infinite flush avoids  
frequent starting and stopping of the mechanism when using a very slow application.  
It also avoids losing capacity through the flushing of partly written groups. On the  
other hand, infinite flush means that data can remain in the buffer for very long  
periods of time, and could be lost in the event of a power failure.  
LUN  
SAN  
Logical Unit Number. A unique number by which a device is identified on the SCSI  
bus. A tape drive has a fixed LUN of 0. In an autoloader, the changer mechanism is  
LUN1.  
Storage Area Network. A dedicated, high-speed network that establishes a direct  
connection between storage elements and servers. The hardware that connects  
workstations and servers to storage devices in a SAN is referred to as a fabric. The  
SAN fabric enables any-server-to-any-storage device connectivity through the use of  
Fibre Channel switching technology.  
SCSI  
Small Computer System Interface. A standard command specification and command  
set that enables computers and peripherals to communicate with each other. HP’s  
Ultrium drives adhere to the SCSI-3 specification and support all features required by  
that standard.  
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Single-Ended and Low Voltage Differential SCSI  
These terms define how the signals are transmitted along the cable.  
With single-ended (SE) SCSI, each signal travels over a single wire and each signal’s  
value is determined by comparing the signal to a paired ground wire. Signal quality  
tends to decrease over longer cable lengths or at increased signal speed.  
With low voltage differential (LVD) signaling, signals travel along two wires and the  
difference in voltage between the wire pairs determines the signal value. This enables  
faster data rates and longer cabling with less susceptibility to noise than SE signaling  
and reduced power consumption.  
Narrow and Wide, Fast, Ultra and Ultra2 SCSI  
Narrow SCSI devices can transfer data one byte at-a-time (and are sometimes  
called “8-bit SCSI” devices). They can conform to either the SCSI-2 or SCSI-3  
protocols. They have a 50-pin connection to the SCSI bus.  
Wide SCSI devices can transfer two bytes of data simultaneously (“16-bit SCSI”).  
They usually have a single, 68-pin connection to the SCSI bus. (This physical  
arrangement is part of the SCSI-3 specification.) They may support either SCSI-2 or  
SCSI-3 protocols. Wide and narrow devices can simultaneously be connected to  
the same bus without problem, provided certain rules are followed.  
Fast SCSI can transfer data at up to 10 MB/sec, using a cable of up to 6 meters  
total length.  
Ultra SCSI can transfer data at up to 20 MB/sec, but the cable length cannot  
exceed 3 meters (it is also known as “Fast20”).  
Ultra2 SCSI can transfer data at up to 80 MB/sec, using a cable of up to 12  
meters.  
Ultra160 SCSI can transfer data at up to 160 MB/sec, using a cable of up to 12  
meters.  
Ultra320 SCSI can transfer data at up to 320 MB/sec, using a cable of up to 12  
meters.  
Ultra SCSI supports both SE and LVD interfaces. Although Ultra2 SCSI and above can  
support SE devices, this is not recommended as the whole bus is slowed to Ultra  
speeds; instead, use LVD devices only.  
HP’s Ultrium drives are Ultra-320 compatible devices. They should be used only on  
LVD host bus adapters for maximum performance.  
sequential access  
Sequential access devices store data sequentially in the order in which it is received.  
Tape devices are the most common sequential access devices. Devices such as disk  
sequentially. Direct access allows speedy retrieval, but is significantly more costly.  
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Index  
infinite flush 30  
A
AIX 17  
ANSI 5  
asynchronous data transfer 29  
AT&T mode 29  
L
Linux 19  
LUN 30  
B
LVD SCSI 31  
Berkeley mode 29  
BOT 29  
buffered mode 29  
AT&T 29  
Berkeley 29  
immediate 30  
C
compression 29  
D
narrow SCSI 31  
data transfer 29  
device files  
AIX 18  
IBM (AIX) 17  
Sun workstations 23  
direct access 31  
documents, related 5  
SAN 30  
SCSI 5, 30  
IBM (AIX) 17  
F
fast SCSI 31  
Linux 19  
fibre channel 30  
filemarks 30  
Sun workstations 23  
sequential access 31  
data values 25  
determining SCSI ID 23  
synchronous data transfer 29  
systems  
filenames under AIX 18  
H
HP Alpha 15  
HP-UX systems 11  
determining attached devices 11  
I
IBM (AIX) 17  
HP-UX 11  
Linux 19  
determining SCSI ID 17  
device files 17  
immediate mode 30  
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U
ultra SCSI 31  
V
verifying installation 27  
W
wide data transfer 29  
wide SCSI 31  
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