| Channel attached Tape device driver |
| |
| -----------------------------WARNING----------------------------------------- |
| This driver is considered to be EXPERIMENTAL. Do NOT use it in |
| production environments. Feel free to test it and report problems back to us. |
| ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
| |
| The LINUX for zSeries tape device driver manages channel attached tape drives |
| which are compatible to IBM 3480 or IBM 3490 magnetic tape subsystems. This |
| includes various models of these devices (for example the 3490E). |
| |
| |
| Tape driver features |
| |
| The device driver supports a maximum of 128 tape devices. |
| No official LINUX device major number is assigned to the zSeries tape device |
| driver. It allocates major numbers dynamically and reports them on system |
| startup. |
| Typically it will get major number 254 for both the character device front-end |
| and the block device front-end. |
| |
| The tape device driver needs no kernel parameters. All supported devices |
| present are detected on driver initialization at system startup or module load. |
| The devices detected are ordered by their subchannel numbers. The device with |
| the lowest subchannel number becomes device 0, the next one will be device 1 |
| and so on. |
| |
| |
| Tape character device front-end |
| |
| The usual way to read or write to the tape device is through the character |
| device front-end. The zSeries tape device driver provides two character devices |
| for each physical device -- the first of these will rewind automatically when |
| it is closed, the second will not rewind automatically. |
| |
| The character device nodes are named /dev/rtibm0 (rewinding) and /dev/ntibm0 |
| (non-rewinding) for the first device, /dev/rtibm1 and /dev/ntibm1 for the |
| second, and so on. |
| |
| The character device front-end can be used as any other LINUX tape device. You |
| can write to it and read from it using LINUX facilities such as GNU tar. The |
| tool mt can be used to perform control operations, such as rewinding the tape |
| or skipping a file. |
| |
| Most LINUX tape software should work with either tape character device. |
| |
| |
| Tape block device front-end |
| |
| The tape device may also be accessed as a block device in read-only mode. |
| This could be used for software installation in the same way as it is used with |
| other operation systems on the zSeries platform (and most LINUX |
| distributions are shipped on compact disk using ISO9660 filesystems). |
| |
| One block device node is provided for each physical device. These are named |
| /dev/btibm0 for the first device, /dev/btibm1 for the second and so on. |
| You should only use the ISO9660 filesystem on LINUX for zSeries tapes because |
| the physical tape devices cannot perform fast seeks and the ISO9660 system is |
| optimized for this situation. |
| |
| |
| Tape block device example |
| |
| In this example a tape with an ISO9660 filesystem is created using the first |
| tape device. ISO9660 filesystem support must be built into your system kernel |
| for this. |
| The mt command is used to issue tape commands and the mkisofs command to |
| create an ISO9660 filesystem: |
| |
| - create a LINUX directory (somedir) with the contents of the filesystem |
| mkdir somedir |
| cp contents somedir |
| |
| - insert a tape |
| |
| - ensure the tape is at the beginning |
| mt -f /dev/ntibm0 rewind |
| |
| - set the blocksize of the character driver. The blocksize 2048 bytes |
| is commonly used on ISO9660 CD-Roms |
| mt -f /dev/ntibm0 setblk 2048 |
| |
| - write the filesystem to the character device driver |
| mkisofs -o /dev/ntibm0 somedir |
| |
| - rewind the tape again |
| mt -f /dev/ntibm0 rewind |
| |
| - Now you can mount your new filesystem as a block device: |
| mount -t iso9660 -o ro,block=2048 /dev/btibm0 /mnt |
| |
| TODO List |
| |
| - Driver has to be stabilized still |
| |
| BUGS |
| |
| This driver is considered BETA, which means some weaknesses may still |
| be in it. |
| If an error occurs which cannot be handled by the code you will get a |
| sense-data dump.In that case please do the following: |
| |
| 1. set the tape driver debug level to maximum: |
| echo 6 >/proc/s390dbf/tape/level |
| |
| 2. re-perform the actions which produced the bug. (Hopefully the bug will |
| reappear.) |
| |
| 3. get a snapshot from the debug-feature: |
| cat /proc/s390dbf/tape/hex_ascii >somefile |
| |
| 4. Now put the snapshot together with a detailed description of the situation |
| that led to the bug: |
| - Which tool did you use? |
| - Which hardware do you have? |
| - Was your tape unit online? |
| - Is it a shared tape unit? |
| |
| 5. Send an email with your bug report to: |
| mailto:Linux390@de.ibm.com |
| |
| |