Linus Torvalds | 1da177e | 2005-04-16 15:20:36 -0700 | [diff] [blame] | 1 | README file for the osst driver |
| 2 | =============================== |
| 3 | (w) Kurt Garloff <garloff@suse.de> 12/2000 |
| 4 | |
| 5 | This file describes the osst driver as of version 0.8.x/0.9.x, the released |
| 6 | version of the osst driver. |
| 7 | It is intended to help advanced users to understand the role of osst and to |
| 8 | get them started using (and maybe debugging) it. |
| 9 | It won't address issues like "How do I compile a kernel?" or "How do I load |
| 10 | a module?", as these are too basic. |
| 11 | Once the OnStream got merged into the official kernel, the distro makers |
| 12 | will provide the OnStream support for those who are not familiar with |
| 13 | hacking their kernels. |
| 14 | |
| 15 | |
| 16 | Purpose |
| 17 | ------- |
| 18 | The osst driver was developed, because the standard SCSI tape driver in |
| 19 | Linux, st, does not support the OnStream SC-x0 SCSI tape. The st is not to |
| 20 | blame for that, as the OnStream tape drives do not support the standard SCSI |
| 21 | command set for Serial Access Storage Devices (SASDs), which basically |
| 22 | corresponds to the QIC-157 spec. |
| 23 | Nevertheless, the OnStream tapes are nice pieces of hardware and therefore |
| 24 | the osst driver has been written to make these tape devs supported by Linux. |
| 25 | The driver is free software. It's released under the GNU GPL and planned to |
| 26 | be integrated into the mainstream kernel. |
| 27 | |
| 28 | |
| 29 | Implementation |
| 30 | -------------- |
| 31 | The osst is a new high-level SCSI driver, just like st, sr, sd and sg. It |
| 32 | can be compiled into the kernel or loaded as a module. |
| 33 | As it represents a new device, it got assigned a new device node: /dev/osstX |
| 34 | are character devices with major no 206 and minor numbers like the /dev/stX |
| 35 | devices. If those are not present, you may create them by calling |
| 36 | Makedevs.sh as root (see below). |
| 37 | The driver started being a copy of st and as such, the osst devices' |
| 38 | behavior looks very much the same as st to the userspace applications. |
| 39 | |
| 40 | |
| 41 | History |
| 42 | ------- |
| 43 | In the first place, osst shared it's identity very much with st. That meant |
| 44 | that it used the same kernel structures and the same device node as st. |
| 45 | So you could only have either of them being present in the kernel. This has |
| 46 | been fixed by registering an own device, now. |
| 47 | st and osst can coexist, each only accessing the devices it can support by |
| 48 | themselves. |
| 49 | |
| 50 | |
| 51 | Installation |
| 52 | ------------ |
| 53 | osst got integrated into the linux kernel. Select it during kernel |
| 54 | configuration as module or compile statically into the kernel. |
| 55 | Compile your kernel and install the modules. |
| 56 | |
| 57 | Now, your osst driver is inside the kernel or available as a module, |
| 58 | depending on your choice during kernel config. You may still need to create |
Adrian Bunk | bf6ee0a | 2006-10-03 22:17:48 +0200 | [diff] [blame] | 59 | the device nodes by calling the Makedevs.sh script (see below) manually. |
Linus Torvalds | 1da177e | 2005-04-16 15:20:36 -0700 | [diff] [blame] | 60 | |
| 61 | To load your module, you may use the command |
| 62 | modprobe osst |
| 63 | as root. dmesg should show you, whether your OnStream tapes have been |
| 64 | recognized. |
| 65 | |
| 66 | If you want to have the module autoloaded on access to /dev/osst, you may |
| 67 | add something like |
| 68 | alias char-major-206 osst |
| 69 | to your /etc/modprobe.conf (before 2.6: modules.conf). |
| 70 | |
| 71 | You may find it convenient to create a symbolic link |
| 72 | ln -s nosst0 /dev/tape |
| 73 | to make programs assuming a default name of /dev/tape more convenient to |
| 74 | use. |
| 75 | |
| 76 | The device nodes for osst have to be created. Use the Makedevs.sh script |
| 77 | attached to this file. |
| 78 | |
| 79 | |
| 80 | Using it |
| 81 | -------- |
| 82 | You may use the OnStream tape driver with your standard backup software, |
| 83 | which may be tar, cpio, amanda, arkeia, BRU, Lone Tar, ... |
| 84 | by specifying /dev/(n)osst0 as the tape device to use or using the above |
| 85 | symlink trick. The IOCTLs to control tape operation are also mostly |
| 86 | supported and you may try the mt (or mt_st) program to jump between |
| 87 | filemarks, eject the tape, ... |
| 88 | |
| 89 | There's one limitation: You need to use a block size of 32kB. |
| 90 | |
| 91 | (This limitation is worked on and will be fixed in version 0.8.8 of |
| 92 | this driver.) |
| 93 | |
| 94 | If you just want to get started with standard software, here is an example |
| 95 | for creating and restoring a full backup: |
| 96 | # Backup |
| 97 | tar cvf - / --exclude /proc | buffer -s 32k -m 24M -B -t -o /dev/nosst0 |
| 98 | # Restore |
| 99 | buffer -s 32k -m 8M -B -t -i /dev/osst0 | tar xvf - -C / |
| 100 | |
| 101 | The buffer command has been used to buffer the data before it goes to the |
| 102 | tape (or the file system) in order to smooth out the data stream and prevent |
| 103 | the tape from needing to stop and rewind. The OnStream does have an internal |
| 104 | buffer and a variable speed which help this, but especially on writing, the |
| 105 | buffering still proves useful in most cases. It also pads the data to |
| 106 | guarantees the block size of 32k. (Otherwise you may pass the -b64 option to |
| 107 | tar.) |
| 108 | Expect something like 1.8MB/s for the SC-x0 drives and 0.9MB/s for the DI-30. |
| 109 | The USB drive will give you about 0.7MB/s. |
| 110 | On a fast machine, you may profit from software data compression (z flag for |
| 111 | tar). |
| 112 | |
| 113 | |
| 114 | USB and IDE |
| 115 | ----------- |
| 116 | Via the SCSI emulation layers usb-storage and ide-scsi, you can also use the |
| 117 | osst driver to drive the USB-30 and the DI-30 drives. (Unfortunately, there |
| 118 | is no such layer for the parallel port, otherwise the DP-30 would work as |
| 119 | well.) For the USB support, you need the latest 2.4.0-test kernels and the |
| 120 | latest usb-storage driver from |
| 121 | http://www.linux-usb.org/ |
| 122 | http://sourceforge.net/cvs/?group_id=3581 |
| 123 | |
| 124 | Note that the ide-tape driver as of 1.16f uses a slightly outdated on-tape |
| 125 | format and therefore is not completely interoperable with osst tapes. |
| 126 | |
| 127 | The ADR-x0 line is fully SCSI-2 compliant and is supported by st, not osst. |
| 128 | The on-tape format is supposed to be compatible with the one used by osst. |
| 129 | |
| 130 | |
| 131 | Feedback and updates |
| 132 | -------------------- |
| 133 | The driver development is coordinated through a mailing list |
| 134 | <osst@linux1.onstream.nl> |
| 135 | a CVS repository and some web pages. |
| 136 | The tester's pages which contain recent news and updated drivers to download |
| 137 | can be found on |
| 138 | http://linux1.onstream.nl/test/ |
| 139 | |
| 140 | If you find any problems, please have a look at the tester's page in order |
| 141 | to see whether the problem is already known and solved. Otherwise, please |
| 142 | report it to the mailing list. Your feedback is welcome. (This holds also |
| 143 | for reports of successful usage, of course.) |
| 144 | In case of trouble, please do always provide the following info: |
| 145 | * driver and kernel version used (see syslog) |
| 146 | * driver messages (syslog) |
| 147 | * SCSI config and OnStream Firmware (/proc/scsi/scsi) |
| 148 | * description of error. Is it reproducible? |
| 149 | * software and commands used |
| 150 | |
| 151 | You may subscribe to the mailing list, BTW, it's a majordomo list. |
| 152 | |
| 153 | |
| 154 | Status |
| 155 | ------ |
| 156 | 0.8.0 was the first widespread BETA release. Since then a lot of reports |
| 157 | have been sent, but mostly reported success or only minor trouble. |
| 158 | All the issues have been addressed. |
| 159 | Check the web pages for more info about the current developments. |
| 160 | 0.9.x is the tree for the 2.3/2.4 kernel. |
| 161 | |
| 162 | |
| 163 | Acknowledgments |
| 164 | ---------------- |
| 165 | The driver has been started by making a copy of Kai Makisara's st driver. |
| 166 | Most of the development has been done by Willem Riede. The presence of the |
| 167 | userspace program osg (onstreamsg) from Terry Hardie has been rather |
| 168 | helpful. The same holds for Gadi Oxman's ide-tape support for the DI-30. |
| 169 | I did add some patches to those drivers as well and coordinated things a |
| 170 | little bit. |
| 171 | Note that most of them did mostly spend their spare time for the creation of |
| 172 | this driver. |
| 173 | The people from OnStream, especially Jack Bombeeck did support this project |
| 174 | and always tried to answer HW or FW related questions. Furthermore, he |
| 175 | pushed the FW developers to do the right things. |
| 176 | SuSE did support this project by allowing me to work on it during my working |
| 177 | time for them and by integrating the driver into their distro. |
| 178 | |
| 179 | More people did help by sending useful comments. Sorry to those who have |
| 180 | been forgotten. Thanks to all the GNU/FSF and Linux developers who made this |
| 181 | platform such an interesting, nice and stable platform. |
| 182 | Thanks go to those who tested the drivers and did send useful reports. Your |
| 183 | help is needed! |
| 184 | |
| 185 | |
| 186 | Makedevs.sh |
| 187 | ----------- |
| 188 | #!/bin/sh |
| 189 | # Script to create OnStream SC-x0 device nodes (major 206) |
| 190 | # Usage: Makedevs.sh [nos [path to dev]] |
| 191 | # $Id: README.osst.kernel,v 1.4 2000/12/20 14:13:15 garloff Exp $ |
| 192 | major=206 |
| 193 | nrs=4 |
| 194 | dir=/dev |
| 195 | test -z "$1" || nrs=$1 |
| 196 | test -z "$2" || dir=$2 |
| 197 | declare -i nr |
| 198 | nr=0 |
| 199 | test -d $dir || mkdir -p $dir |
| 200 | while test $nr -lt $nrs; do |
| 201 | mknod $dir/osst$nr c $major $nr |
| 202 | chown 0.disk $dir/osst$nr; chmod 660 $dir/osst$nr; |
| 203 | mknod $dir/nosst$nr c $major $[nr+128] |
| 204 | chown 0.disk $dir/nosst$nr; chmod 660 $dir/nosst$nr; |
| 205 | mknod $dir/osst${nr}l c $major $[nr+32] |
| 206 | chown 0.disk $dir/osst${nr}l; chmod 660 $dir/osst${nr}l; |
| 207 | mknod $dir/nosst${nr}l c $major $[nr+160] |
| 208 | chown 0.disk $dir/nosst${nr}l; chmod 660 $dir/nosst${nr}l; |
| 209 | mknod $dir/osst${nr}m c $major $[nr+64] |
| 210 | chown 0.disk $dir/osst${nr}m; chmod 660 $dir/osst${nr}m; |
| 211 | mknod $dir/nosst${nr}m c $major $[nr+192] |
| 212 | chown 0.disk $dir/nosst${nr}m; chmod 660 $dir/nosst${nr}m; |
| 213 | mknod $dir/osst${nr}a c $major $[nr+96] |
| 214 | chown 0.disk $dir/osst${nr}a; chmod 660 $dir/osst${nr}a; |
| 215 | mknod $dir/nosst${nr}a c $major $[nr+224] |
| 216 | chown 0.disk $dir/nosst${nr}a; chmod 660 $dir/nosst${nr}a; |
| 217 | let nr+=1 |
| 218 | done |