Summary: 4mm tape drive on a SunOS 4.1.4 system (fwd)

Steven Sakata (sakats@buzzeo.com)
Wed, 01 Apr 1998 13:04:44 -1000 (HST)

This message is in MIME format. The first part should be readable text,
while the remaining parts are likely unreadable without MIME-aware tools.
Send mail to mime@docserver.cac.washington.edu for more info.

--Boundary_(ID_R3qIaFaKbfjoyP1lCUQYug)
Content-id: <Pine.SOL.3.96.980401130313.954H@service30>
Content-type: TEXT/PLAIN; CHARSET=US-ASCII

Thanks to all of you who responded to my question for the correct arguments
for the SunOS 4.1.4 "dump" command on a 4mm tape drive. The attachment
basically describes the answer very well.

- Steven.

---------- Forwarded message ----------
Date: Wed, 1 Apr 1998 15:45:04 -0500
From: "Button, Daniel (SOM400A)" <DButton@exchange.ml.com>
To: Steven Sakata <sakats@buzzeo.com>
Subject: RE: 4mm tape drive on a SunOS 4.1.4 system

Steve,

Take a look at this.

Dan


-----Original Message-----
From: Steven Sakata [SMTP:sakats@buzzeo.com]
Sent: Wednesday, April 01, 1998 1:25 PM
To: sun-managers@ra.mcs.anl.gov
Subject: 4mm tape drive on a SunOS 4.1.4 system

I'm trying to back up a SunOS 4.1.4 system on a 4mm tape drive
with the
dump command. However, looking at the man page, there's no
mention of
what arguments to use for a 4mm tape drive. Does anyone know
the correct
arguments?

Thanks, Steven.

--Boundary_(ID_R3qIaFaKbfjoyP1lCUQYug)
Content-id: <Pine.SOL.3.96.980401130313.954I@service30>
Content-type: TEXT/PLAIN; CHARSET=US-ASCII; NAME=4mm-tape-cfg.txt
Content-description:
Content-disposition: ATTACHMENT; FILENAME=4mm-tape-cfg.txt

Symptoms and Resolutions article 10688
[ Notify of patch changes ]
[ Edit/Retrieve Marked Documents ] [ Mark Document ]

------------------------------------------------------------------------

SRDB ID: 10688

SYNOPSIS: Dump parameters for 4mm dat

DETAIL DESCRIPTION:

What are the dump parameters for 4mm DAT drive for 4.1.3U1?

SOLUTION SUMMARY:

Here are the dump parameters for 4.1.3U1.

Native (non-compressed) mode:

dump 0ubdsf 96 54000 5200 /dev/rst0 /dev/xxx

The 96 specifies a blocking factor of 48 which is optimum for DAT/Loader
The 54,000 is the same density factor used for the 8mm drives
The 5,200 is used for size instead of 6000, because the DAT has a
capacity of 2GB rather than the 2.3GB capacity of 8mm drives.
The rst0 specifies non compression mode (this is very important)

compression mode:

The DAT drive supports compression. However, it is not possible to
determine how much data will fit on a tape. A typical value is twice
non-compression mode, but in some cases the data won't fit on the
tape and in many cases the data is muchmore compressible and tape
capacity will be wasted.

To be on the safe side, doubling the capacity is recommended. It should
be noted however that in some cases even this may not be conservative
enough, and that the only way to guarantee that the dump will not run
out of tape is to not use compression.

Doubling the size option (5200 in non-compressed mode) results in the
following command:

dump 0ubdsf 96 54000 10400 /dev/rst8 /dev/xxx

The 10400 specifies an anticipated capacity of 4Gbytes. Note the
use of /dev/rst8 instead of /dev/rst0.

PRODUCT AREA: System Administration
PRODUCT: Device config
SUNOS RELEASE: SunOS 4.1.3_U1
HARDWARE: any

------------------------------------------------------------------------
Home | Free Services | Contract Services | Account Services
Table of Contents | Comments | Help | SunSolve FAQ's

Questions or comments regarding this service? webmaster
Copyright 1994-1997 Sun Microsystems, Inc., 901 San Antonio Road, Palo
Alto, CA 94303 USA.
All rights reserved.

--Boundary_(ID_R3qIaFaKbfjoyP1lCUQYug)--