st man page on OpenIndiana

Man page or keyword search:  
man Server   20441 pages
apropos Keyword Search (all sections)
Output format
OpenIndiana logo
[printable version]

st(7D)				    Devices				st(7D)

NAME
       st - driver for SCSI tape devices

SYNOPSIS
       st@target,lun:l,m,h,c,ubn

DESCRIPTION
       The st device driver provides a standard interface to various SCSI tape
       devices. See mtio(7I) for details.

       To determine if the st device driver supports your tape	device,	 SPARC
       users should enter the following on a command line:

	 % strings /kernel/drv/sparcv9/st | grep -i <tape device name>

       x86  users  can	do  the following to determine if the st device driver
       supports a particular tape device:

	 % strings /kernel/drv/st | grep -i <tape device name>

       The driver can be opened with either rewind on close or	no  rewind  on
       close  options.	It  can also be opened with the O_NDELAY (see open(2))
       option when there is no tape inserted in the drive. A maximum  of  four
       tape  formats per device are supported (see FILES below). The tape for‐
       mat is specified using the device name. (Tape format is	also  referred
       to as tape density).

       Following  are  a  list	of  SCSI  commands  that can be executed while
       another host reserves the tape drive. The commands are:

	 SCMD_TEST_UNIT_READY
	 SCMD_REQUEST_SENSE
	 SCMD_READ_BLKLIM
	 SCMD_INQUIRY
	 SCMD_RESERVE
	 SCMD_RELEASE
	 SCMD_DOORLOCK
	 SCMD_REPORT_DENSITIES
	 SCMD_LOG_SENSE_G1
	 SCMD_PERSISTENT_RESERVE_IN
	 SCMD_PERSISTENT_RESERVE_OUT
	 SCMD_REPORT_LUNS

       In multi-initiator environments, the driver will not reserve  the  tape
       drive if above commands are issued. For other SCSI commands, the driver
       reserves the tape drive and releases the drive at close if  it has been
       reserved.  Refer	 to  the  MTIOCRESERVE	and  MTIOCRELEASE  ioctls   in
       mtio(7I) for information about how to allow  a  tape  drive  to	remain
       reserved	 upon  close. See the flag options below for information about
       disabling this feature.

       If a SCSI-3 persistent reservation is  done  through  the  driver,  the
       driver disables all existing SCSI-2 reservations.

       If  the	tape  drive  is opened in O_NDELAY mode, no reservation occurs
       during the open, as per the POSIX standard (see standards(5)). However,
       if  a  command not found in the above list is used, a  reservation will
       occur to provide reserve/release functionality before  the  command  is
       issued.

   Persistent Errors and Asynchronous Tape Operation
       The  st	driver	now supports persistent errors (see mtio(7I) and asyn‐
       chronous tape operations (see mtio(7I), aioread(3C), and aiowrite(3C)).

   Read Operation
       If the driver is opened for reading in a different format than the tape
       is written in, the driver overrides the user-selected format. For exam‐
       ple, if a 1/4" cartridge tape is written in QIC-24  format  and	opened
       for  reading in QIC-150, the driver detects a read failure on the first
       read and automatically switches to QIC-24 to read the data.

       Note that if the low density format is used,  no	 indication  is	 given
       that  the  driver has overridden the format you selected. Other formats
       issue a warning message to inform you of an  overridden	format	selec‐
       tion.  Some  devices  automatically  perform  this  function and do not
       require driver support (1/2" reel tape drive, for example).

   Write Operation
       Writing from the beginning of tape is performed in  the	user-specified
       format.	The original tape format is used for appending onto previously
       written tapes.

   Tape Configuration
       The st driver has a built-in configuration table for most Sun-supported
       tape  drives.  For  those tape drives that are not in the table, the st
       driver tries to read the configuration  from  the  tape	drive  through
       optional	 SCSI-3	 commands. To support the addition of third party tape
       devices which are not in the  built-in configuration table or not  able
       to  report  their  configuration, device information can be supplied in
       st.conf as global properties that apply to each node, or as  properties
       that  are  applicable to one node only. By supplying the information in
       st.conf, the built-in configuration is overridden  and  the  st	driver
       will  not query the configuration from tape drives. The st driver looks
       for the property called tape-config-list. The value of this property is
       a list of triplets, where each triplet consists of three strings.

       The formal syntax is:

	 tape-config-list = <triplet> [, <triplet> *];

       where

	 <triplet> := <vid+pid>, <pretty print>, <data-property-name>

       and

	 <data-property-name> = <version>, <type>, <bsize>,
		 <options>, <number of densities>,
		 <density> [, <density>*], <default-density>;

       or

	 <data-property-name> = <version 2>, <type>, <bsize>,
		   <options>, <number of densities>,
		   <density> [, <density>*], <default-density>,
		   <non-motion time-out>, <I/O time-out>,
		   <rewind time-out>, <space time-out>,
		   <load time-out>, <unload time-out>,
		   <erase time-out>;

       A  semicolon (;) is used to terminate a prototype devinfo node specifi‐
       cation. Individual elements listed within the specification should  not
       be separated by a semicolon. (Refer to driver.conf(4) for more informa‐
       tion.)

       <vid+pid> is the string that is returned by the tape device on  a  SCSI
       inquiry	command.  This	string	may contain any character in the range
       0x20-0x7e. Characters such as " " " (double quote) or  "	 '  "  (single
       quote),	which  are not permitted in property value strings, are repre‐
       sented by their octal equivalent (for example,  42 and	47).  Trailing
       spaces may be truncated.

       <pretty print> is used to report the device on the console. This string
       may have zero length, in which case  the	 <vid+pid>  will  be  used  to
       report the device.

       <data-property-name> is the name of the property which contains all the
       tape configuration values (such as <type>, <bsize>, etc.) corresponding
       for the tape drive for the specified <vid+pid>.

       <version>  is  a	 version  number  and should be 1 or 2. In the future,
       higher version numbers may be used to allow for changes in  the	syntax
       of the <data-property-name> value list.

       <type>	 is    a    type   field.   Valid   types   are	  defined   in
       /usr/include/sys/mtio.h. For third party tape configuration,  the  fol‐
       lowing generic types are recommended:

       MT_ISQIC			     0x32
       MT_ISREEL		     0x33
       MT_ISDAT			     0x34
       MT_IS8MM			     0x35
       MT_ISOTHER		     0x36
       MT_ISTAND25G		     0x37
       MT_ISDLT			     0x38
       MT_ISSTK9840		     0x39
       MT_ISBMDLT1		     0x3A

       MT_LTO			     0x3B

       <bsize>	is  the	 preferred  block  size	 of the tape device. The value
       should be 0 for variable block size devices.

       <options> is a bit pattern representing	the  devices,  as  defined  in
       /usr/include/sys/scsi/targets/stdef.h.  Valid flags for tape configura‐
       tion are shown in the following table. Note that this  table  does  not
       list   flags   that   are   non-configurable   in   st.conf  (including
       ST_KNOWS_MEDIA which uses the media type reported from the mode	select
       data to select the correct  density code).

       ST_VARIABLE			      0x0001
       ST_QIC				      0x0002
       ST_REEL				      0x0004
       ST_BSF				      0x0008
       ST_BSR				      0x0010
       ST_LONG_ERASE			      0x0020
       ST_AUTODEN_OVERRIDE		      0x0040
       ST_NOBUF				      0x0080
       ST_KNOWS_EOD			      0x0200
       ST_UNLOADABLE			      0x0400
       ST_SOFT_ERROR_REPORTING		      0x0800
       ST_LONG_TIMEOUTS			      0x1000
       ST_NO_RECSIZE_LIMIT		      0x8000
       ST_MODE_SEL_COMP			      0x10000
       ST_NO_RESERVE_RELEASE		      0x20000
       ST_READ_IGNORE_ILI		      0x40000
       ST_READ_IGNORE_EOFS		      0x80000
       ST_SHORT_FILEMARKS		      0x100000
       ST_EJECT_TAPE_ON_CHANGER_FAILURE	      0x200000
       ST_RETRY_ON_RECOVERED_DEFERRED_ERROR   0x400000
       ST_WORMABLE			      0x1000000

       ST_VARIABLE

	   The	flag indicates the tape device supports variable length record
	   sizes.

       ST_QIC

	   The flag indicates a Quarter Inch Cartridge (QIC) tape device.

       ST_REEL

	   The flag indicates a 1/2−inch reel tape device.

       ST_BSF

	   If flag is set, the device supports backspace over EOF marks (bsf -
	   see mt(1)).

       ST_BSR

	   If flag is set, the tape device supports the backspace record oper‐
	   ation (bsr - see mt(1)). If the device does not support bsr, the st
	   driver emulates the action by rewinding the tape and using the for‐
	   ward space record (fsf) operation to forward the tape to  the  cor‐
	   rect	 file.	The  driver  then uses forward space record (fsr - see
	   mt(1)) to forward the tape to the correct record.

       ST_LONG_ERASE

	   The flag indicates the tape device needs a longer time than	normal
	   to erase.

       ST_AUTODEN_OVERRIDE

	   The	auto-density override flag. The device is capable of determin‐
	   ing	the  tape  density  automatically  without  issuing  a	"mode-
	   select"/"mode-sense command."

       ST_NOBUF

	   The	flag disables the device's ability to perform buffered writes.
	   A buffered write occurs when the device acknowledges the completion
	   of  a write request after the data has been written to the device's
	   buffer, but before all of the data has been written to the tape.

       ST_KNOWS_EOD

	   If flag is set, the device can determine when EOD (End of Data) has
	   been	 reached.  When this flag is set, the st driver uses fast file
	   skipping. Otherwise, file skipping happens one file at a time.

       ST_UNLOADABLE

	   The flag indicates the device will not complain if the st driver is
	   unloaded and loaded again (see modload(1M) and modunload(1M)). That
	   is, the driver will return the correct inquiry string.

       ST_SOFT_ERROR_REPORTING

	   The flag indicates the tape device will perform a  "request	sense"
	   or  "log  sense" command when the device is closed. Currently, only
	   Exabyte and DAT drives support this feature.

       ST_LONG_TIMEOUTS

	   The flag indicates the tape device requires timeouts that are  five
	   times longer than usual for normal operation.

       ST_NO_RECSIZE_LIMIT

	   The	flag  applies to variable-length tape devices. If this flag is
	   set, the record size is not limited to a 64 Kbyte record size.  The
	   record  size	 is  only  limited by the smaller of either the record
	   size supported by the device or the maximum DMA  transfer  size  of
	   the system. (Refer to Large Record Sizes and WARNINGS.) The maximum
	   block size that will not be	broken	into  smaller  blocks  can  be
	   determined  from the mt_bf returned from the MTIOCGET ioctl(). This
	   number is the lesser of the upper block limit returned by the drive
	   from	 READ BLOCK LIMITS command and the dma-max property set by the
	   Host Bus Adapter (HBA) to which the drive is attached.

       ST_MODE_SEL_COMP

	   If the ST_MODE_SEL_COMP flag is set, the driver determines which of
	   the two mode pages the device supports for selecting or deselecting
	   compression. It first tries the Data Compression mode page  (0x0F);
	   if  this fails, it tries the Device Configuration mode page (0x10).
	   Some devices, however, may need a specific density code for select‐
	   ing or deselecting compression. Please refer to the device specific
	   SCSI manual. When the flag is set, compression is enabled  only  if
	   the "c" or "u" device is used. Note that when the lower 2 densities
	   of a drive are identically configured and the upper 2 densities are
	   identically	configured,  but  the lower and upper differ from each
	   other and ST_MODE_SEL_COMP is set, the "m" node sets compression on
	   for	the lower density code (for example, 0x42) and the "c" and "u"
	   nodes set compression on  for  the  higher  density	(for  example,
	   0x43). For any other device densities, compression is disabled.

       ST_NO_RESERVE_RELEASE

	   The	ST_NO_RESERVE_RELEASE flag disables the use of reserve on open
	   and release on close. If an attempt to use a ioctl of MTRESERVE  or
	   MTRELEASE on a drive with this flag set, it will return an error of
	   ENOTTY (inappropriate ioctl for device).

       ST_READ_IGNORE_ILI

	   The ST_READ_IGNORE_ILI flag is applicable only  to  variable	 block
	   devices  which  support the SILI bit option. The ST_READ_IGNORE_ILI
	   flag indicates that SILI (supress incorrect length  indicator)  bit
	   will	 be  set  during  reads.  When	this  flag is set, short reads
	   (requested read size is less than the record size on the tape) will
	   be  successful and the number of bytes transferred will be equal to
	   the record size on the tape. The tape will  be  positioned  at  the
	   start  of the next record skipping over the extra data (the remain‐
	   ing data has been has been lost). Long reads (requested  read  size
	   is  more than the record size on the tape) will see a large perfor‐
	   mance gain when this flag is set, due to overhead  reduction.  When
	   this flag is not set, short reads will return an error of ENOMEM.

       ST_READ_IGNORE_EOFS

	   The	ST_READ_IGNORE_EOFS  flag is applicable only to 1/2" Reel Tape
	   drives and when performing consecutive reads only. It should not be
	   used	 for  any  other  tape	command. Usually End-of-recorded-media
	   (EOM) is indicated by two EOF marks on 1/2"	tape  and  application
	   cannot  read	 past  EOM.  When  this	 flag is set, two EOF marks no
	   longer indicate EOM allowing applications  to  read	past  two  EOF
	   marks.  In this case it is the responsibility of the application to
	   detect end-of-recorded-media (EOM). When this  flag	is  set,  tape
	   operations  (like  MTEOM)  which  positions	the  tape  at  end-of-
	   recorded-media will fail since detection  of	 end-of-recorded-media
	   (EOM) is to be handled by the application. This flag should be used
	   when backup applications have  embedded  double  filemarks  between
	   files.

       ST_SHORT_FILEMARKS

	   The	ST_SHORT_FILEMARKS flag is applicable only to EXABYTE 8mm tape
	   drives which supports short filemarks. When this flag is set, short
	   filemarks is used for writing filemarks. Short filemarks could lead
	   to tape incompatible with  some  otherwise  compatible  device.  By
	   default long filemarks will be used for writing filemarks.

       ST_EJECT_TAPE_ON_CHANGER_FAILURE

	   If  ST_EJECT_TAPE_ON_CHANGER_FAILURE	 flag  is  set,	 the  tape  is
	   ejected automatically if the	 tape  cartridge  is  trapped  in  the
	   medium due to positioning problems of the medium changer.

	   The	following ASC/ASCQ keys are defined to the reasons for causing
	   tape ejection if ST_EJECT_TAPE_ON_CHANGER_FAILURE option is set  to
	   0x200000:

	   Sense  ASC/ASCQ  Description

	   Key

	   4	  15/01	    Mechanical Failure

	   4	  44/00	    Internal Target Failure

	   2	  53/00	    Media Load or Eject Failed

	   4	  53/00	    Media Load or Eject Failed

	   4	  53/01	    Unload Tape Failure

       ST_RETRY_ON_RECOVERED_DEFERRED_ERROR

	   If  ST_RETRY_ON_RECOVERED_DEFERRED_ERROR flag is set, the st driver
	   will retry the last write if this cmd caused a check condition with
	   error  code 0x71 and sense code 0x01. Some tape drives, notably the
	   IBM 3090, require this option.

       ST_WORMABLE

	   When ST_WORMABLE is set, st attempts to detect the presence of WORM
	   media in the device.

       <number	of  densities> is the number of densities specified. Each tape
       drive can support up to four densities. The value entered should there‐
       fore  be	 between 1 and 4; if less than 4, the remaining densities will
       be assigned a value of 0x0.

       <density> is a single-byte hexadecimal number. It can either  be	 found
       in  the device specification manual or be obtained from the device ven‐
       dor.

       <default-density> has a value between 0 and (<number  of	 densities>  -
       1).

       <non-motion  time-out> Time in seconds that the drive should be able to
       perform any SCSI command that doesn't require tape to  be  moved.  This
       includes	 mode sense, mode select, reserve, release, read block limits,
       and test unit ready.

       <I/O time-out> Time in seconds to perform data transfer I/O to or  from
       tape including worst case error recovery.

       <rewind	time-out>  Time	 in seconds to rewind from anywhere on tape to
       BOT including worst case recovery forcing buffered write data to tape.

       <space time-out> Time in seconds to space to any file, block or end  of
       data  on	 tape.	Including  worst  case	when any form of cataloging is
       invalid.

       <load time-out> Time in seconds to load tape and be ready  to  transfer
       first block. This should include worst case recovery reading tape cata‐
       log or drive specific operations done at load.

       <unload time-out> Time in seconds to unload tape. Should include	 worst
       case  time to write to catalog, unthread, and tape cartridge unloading.
       Also should include worst case time for any drive  specific  operations
       that  are  preformed  at	 unload. Should not include rewind time as the
       driver rewinds tape before issuing the unload.

       <erase time-out> Time in seconds to preform a full (BOT to  EOT)	 erase
       of longest medium with worst case error recovery.

   Device Statistics Support
       Each  device  maintains I/O statistics both for the device and for each
       partition allocated on that  device.  For  each	device/partition,  the
       driver  accumulates  reads,  writes, bytes read, and bytes written. The
       driver also takes hi-resolution time stamps at  queue  entry  and  exit
       points,	which facilitates monitoring the residence time and cumulative
       residence-length product for each queue.

       Each device also has error statistics associated with  it.  These  must
       include	counters  for  hard  errors, soft errors and transport errors.
       Other data may be implemented as required.

IOCTLS
       The behavior of SCSI tape positioning ioctls is	the  same  across  all
       devices	which  support	them.  (Refer  to  mtio(7I).) However, not all
       devices support all ioctls. The	driver	returns	 an  ENOTTY  error  on
       unsupported ioctls.

       The  retension ioctl only applies to 1/4" cartridge tape devices. It is
       used to restore tape tension, thus improving the tape's soft error rate
       after extensive start-stop operations or long-term storage.

       In  order to increase performance of variable-length tape devices (par‐
       ticularly when they are used to read/write  small  record  sizes),  two
       operations in the MTIOCTOP ioctl, MTSRSZ and MTGRSZ, can be used to set
       and get fixed record lengths. The ioctl also  works  with  fixed-length
       tape  drives  which  allow multiple record sizes. The min/max limits of
       record size allowed on a driver are found by using a SCSI-2 READ	 BLOCK
       LIMITS  command	to  the	 device.  If  this  command fails, the default
       min/max record sizes allowed are 1 byte and 63k bytes.  An  application
       that  needs  to	use a different record size opens the device, sets the
       size with the MTSRSZ ioctl, and then continues with I/O. The  scope  of
       the  change in record size remains until the device is closed. The next
       open to the device resets the record size to the	 default  record  size
       (retrieved from st.conf).

       Note  that  the	error status is reset by the MTIOCGET get status ioctl
       call or by the next read, write, or other ioctl operation. If no	 error
       has  occurred (sense key is 0), the current file and record position is
       returned.

ERRORS
       EACCES	 The driver is opened for write access and the tape is	write-
		 protected or the tape unit is reserved by another host.

       EBUSY	 The tape drive is in use by another process. Only one process
		 can use the tape drive at a time. The	driver	will  allow  a
		 grace period for the other process to finish before reporting
		 this error.

       EINVAL	 The number of bytes read or written is not a multiple of  the
		 physical record size (fixed-length tape devices only).

       EIO	 During	 opening,  the tape device is not ready because either
		 no tape is in the drive, or the drive is  not	on-line.  Once
		 open,	this  error  is returned if the requested I/O transfer
		 could not be completed.

       ENOTTY	 This indicates that the tape  device  does  not  support  the
		 requested ioctl function.

       ENXIO	 During opening, the tape device does not exist.

       ENOMEM	 This indicates that the record size on the tape drive is more
		 than the requested size during read operation.

EXAMPLES
       Example 1 Global tape-config list property

       The following is an example of a global tape-config-list property:

	 tape-config-list =
	 "Magic DAT", "Magic 4mm Helical Scan", "magic-data",
	 "Major Appliance", "Major Appliance Tape", "major-tape";

	 magic-data  = 1,0x34,1024,0x1639,4,0,0x8c,0x8c,0x8c,3;
	 major-tape = 2,0x3c,0,0x18619,4,0x0,0x0,0x0,0x0,
		      3,0,0,30,120,0,0,36000;

	 name="st" class="scsi"
		   target=0 lun=0;
	 name="st" class="scsi"
		   target=1 lun=0;
	 name="st" class="scsi"
		   target=2 lun=0;
		   .
		   .
		   .
	 name="st" class="scsi"
		   target=6 lun=0;

       Example 2 Tape-config-list property applicable to target 2 only

       The following is an example of a tape-config-list  property  applicable
       to target 2 only:

	 name="st" class="scsi"
		 target=0 lun=0;
	 name="st" class="scsi"
		 target=1 lun=0;
	 name="st" class="scsi"
		 target=2 lun=0
		 tape-config-list =
		 "Magic	  DAT", "Magic 4mm Helical Scan", "magic-data"
		 magic-data = 1,0x34,1024,0x1639,4,0,0x8c,0x8c,0x8c,3;
	 name="st" class="scsi"
		 target=3 lun=0;
		   .
		   .
		   .
	 name="st" class="scsi"
		 target=6 lun=0;

   Large Record Sizes
       To  support  applications  such	as seismic programs that require large
       record sizes, the flag ST_NO_RECSIZE_LIMIT must be set in drive	option
       in  the	configuration  entry. A SCSI tape drive that needs to transfer
       large records should OR this flag with other  flags  in	the  'options'
       field  in st.conf. (Refer to Tape Configuration.) By default, this flag
       is set for the built-in config  entries	of  Archive  DAT  and  Exabyte
       drives.

       If  this	 flag  is set, the st driver issues a SCSI-2 READ BLOCK LIMITS
       command to the device to determine the maximum record size  allowed  by
       it.  If the command fails, st continues to use the maximum record sizes
       mentioned in the mtio(7I) man page.

       If the command succeeds, st restricts the maximum transfer  size	 of  a
       variable-length device to the minimum of that record size and the maxi‐
       mum DMA size that the host adapter can handle. Fixed-length devices are
       bound by the maximum DMA size allocated by the machine. Note that tapes
       created with a large  record  size  may	not  be	 readable  by  earlier
       releases or on other platforms.

       (Refer to the WARNINGS section for more information.)

   EOT Handling
       The  Emulex  drives have only a physical end of tape (PEOT); thus it is
       not possible to write past EOT. All other drives have a logical end  of
       tape  (LEOT)  before PEOT to guarantee flushing the data onto the tape.
       The amount of storage between LEOT and PEOT varies  from	 less  than  1
       Mbyte to about 20 Mbyte, depending on the tape drive.

       If EOT is encountered while writing an Emulex, no error is reported but
       the number of bytes transferred is 0 and no further writing is allowed.
       On  all other drives, the first write that encounters EOT will return a
       short count or 0. If a short count is returned,	then  the  next	 write
       will return 0. After a zero count is returned, the next write returns a
       full count or short count. A following write returns  0	again.	It  is
       important  that the number and size of trailer records be kept as small
       as possible to prevent data loss. Therefore, writing after EOT  is  not
       recommended.

       Reading past EOT is transparent to the user. Reading is stopped only by
       reading EOF's. For 1/2" reel devices, it is possible to	read  off  the
       end of the reel if one reads past the two file marks which mark the end
       of recorded media.

FILES
       /kernel/drv/st.conf

	   driver configuration file

       /usr/include/sys/mtio.h

	   structures and definitions for mag tape io control commands

       /usr/include/sys/scsi/targets/stdef.h

	   definitions for SCSI tape drives

       /dev/rmt/[0− 127][l,m,h,u,c][b][n]

	   where  l,m,h,u,c  specifies	the  density   (low,   medium,	 high,
	   ultra/compressed),  b the optional BSD behavior (see mtio(7I)), and
	   n the optional no rewind behavior. For example, /dev/rmt/0lbn spec‐
	   ifies unit 0, low density, BSD behavior, and no rewind.

	   For 1/2" reel tape devices (HP-88780), the densities are:

	   l				 800 BPI density
	   m				 1600 BPI density
	   h				 6250 BPI density
	   c				 data compression
					 (not supported on all modules)

	   For 8mm tape devices (Exabyte 8200/8500/8505):

	   l				 Standard 2 Gbyte format
	   m				 5 Gbyte format (8500, 8505 only)
	   h,c				 5 Gbyte compressed format (8505 only)

	   For 4mm DAT tape devices (Archive Python):

	   l				 Standard format
	   m,h,c			 data compression

	   For all QIC (other than QIC-24) tape devices:

	   l,m,h,c			 density of the tape cartridge type
					 (not all devices can read and
					 write all formats)

	   For QIC-24 tape devices (Emulex MT−02):

	   l				 QIC-11 Format
	   m,h,c			 QIC-24 Format

SEE ALSO
       mt(1),	modload(1M),   modunload(1M),	open(2),   read(2),  write(2),
       aioread(3C),  aiowrite(3C),  kstat(3KSTAT),  driver.conf(4),   scsi(4),
       standards(5), esp(7D), isp(7D), mtio(7I), ioctl(9E)

DIAGNOSTICS
       The  st	driver	diagnostics  may be printed to the console or messages
       file.

       Each diagnostic is dependent  on	 the  value  of	 the  system  variable
       st_error_level.	st_error_level may be set in the /etc/system file. The
       default setting for st_error_level is 4 (SCSI_ERR_RETRYABLE)  which  is
       suitable	 for  most  configurations since only actual fault diagnostics
       are printed. Settings range from values 0 (SCSI_ERR_ALL) which is  most
       verbose,	 to  6 (SCSI_ERR_NONE) which is least verbose. See stdef.h for
       the full list of error-levels. SCSI_ERR_ALL level the amount  of	 diag‐
       nostic information is likely to be excessive and unnecessary.

       The st driver diagnostics are described below:

	 Error for Command: <scsi_cmd_name()> Error Level:<error_class>
	 Requested Block: <blkno>  Error Block: <err_blkno>
	 Vendor: <name>: Serial Number: <inq_serial>
	 Sense Key: <es_key> ASC: 0x<es_add_code> (scsi_asc_ascq_name()>), ASCQ:
	 0x<es_qual_code>, FRU: 0x<ex_fru_code>

       where  <error_class> may be any one of the following: "All," "Unknown,"
       "Informational," "Recovered," "Retryable," "Fatal"

       The command indicated by <scsi_cmd_name> failed. Requested Block repre‐
       sents  the block where the transfer started. Error Block represents the
       block that caused the error. Sense Key, ASC, ASCQ and  FRU  information
       is  returned  by the target in response to a request sense command. See
       SCSI protocol documentation for description of Sense  Key,  ASC,	 ASCQ,
       FRU.

       The  st	driver	attempts to validate entries in the st.conf file. Each
       field in the entry is checked for upper and lower  limits  and  invalid
       bits set. The fields are named as follows in config string order:

		 conf version
		 drive type
		 block size
		 options
		 number of densities
		 density code
		 default density
		 non motion timeout
		 I/O timeout
		 space timeout
		 load timeout
		 unload timeout
		 erase timeout

       The st.conf diagnostics are described below:

	 <con-name> <field-in-err> <problem-with-field>

       where <con-name> is the name of the config string. Where <field-in-err>
       is the field containing invalid entries and where  <problem-with-field>
       describes the nature of the invalid entry.

	 Write/read: not modulo <n> block size

       The  request  size  for fixed record size devices must be a multiple of
       the specified block size.

	 Recovery by resets failed

       After a transport error, the driver attempted to recover by  issuing  a
       device  reset and then a bus reset if device reset failed. These recov‐
       eries failed.

	 Periodic head cleaning required

       The driver reported that periodic head cleaning is now  required.  This
       diagnostic is generated either due to a threshold number of retries, or
       due to the device communicating to the driver  that  head  cleaning  is
       required.

	 Soft error rate (<n>%) during writing/reading was too high

       The soft error rate has exceeded the threshold specified by the vendor.

	 SCSI transport failed: reason 'xxxx': {retrying|giving up}

       The  Host  Bus  Adapter	(HBA) has failed to transport a command to the
       target for the reason stated. The driver will either retry the  command
       or, ultimately, give up.

	 Tape not inserted in drive

       A  media	 access command was attempted while there was no tape inserted
       into the specified drive. In this case, the drive returns sense key  of
       DRIVE NOT READY.

	 Transport rejected

       The Host Bus Adapter (HBA) driver is not accepting commands after fail‐
       ing to successfully transport a scsi packet to the target.  The	actual
       status  received	 by  the  st driver from the underlying HBA driver was
       either TRAN_FATAL_ERROR or TRAN_BADPKT.

	 Retrying command

       The st driver failed to complete a  command.  However  the  command  is
       retryable and will be retried.

	 Giving up

       The st driver has exhausted retries or otherwise is unable to retry the
       command and so is giving up.

	 No target struct for st%d

       The st driver failed to obtain state information because the  requested
       state  structure	 was  not allocated. The specified device was probably
       not attached.

	 File mark detected

       The operation detected an end of file mark. (File marks signify the end
       of a file on the tape media).

	 End-of-media detected

       The operation reached the end of the tape media.

	 Exabyte soft error reporting failed. DAT soft error reporting failed

       The  st	driver was unable to determine if the soft error threshold had
       been exceeded because it did not successfully read the data it requires
       or  did	not  obtain  enough data. This data is retrieved using the log
       sense command.

	 Log sense parameter code does not make sense

       The log sense command retrieves hardware statistics that are stored  on
       the  drive  (for	 example,  soft error counts and retries.) If the data
       retrieved from the drive is invalid, this message is  printed  and  the
       data is not used.

	 Restoring tape position at fileno=%x, blkno=%lx....

       The  st	driver	is  positioning	 to the specified file and block. This
       occurs on an open.

	 Failed to restore the last <file/block> position:
	 In this state, tape will be loaded at BOT during next open

       The st driver could not position to the	specified  location  and  will
       revert to the beginning of the tape when the next open is attempted.

	 Device does not support compression

       The  compression	 facility  of  the  device  was requested. However the
       device does not have a hardware compression capability.

	 DAT soft error reset failed

       After DAT soft error reporting, the counters  within  the  device  that
       accumulate this sense data need to be re-set.  This operation failed.

	 Errors after pkt alloc (b_flags=0x%x, b_error=0x%x)

       Memory allocation for a scsi packet failed.

	 Incorrect length indicator set

       The  drive  reported  the length of data requested in a READ operation,
       was incorrect. Incorrect Length Indicator (ILI) is a very commonly used
       facility	 in SCSI tape protocol and should not be seen as an error per-
       se. Applications typically probe a new tape with a read of any  length,
       using  the  returned  length  to the read system call for future reads.
       Along with this operation, an underlying ILI  error  is	received.  ILI
       errors  are  therefore informational only and are masked at the default
       st_error_level.

	 Data property (%s) has no value
	 Data property (%s) incomplete
	 Version # for data property (%s) greater than 1

       These diagnostics indicate problems in retrieving  the  values  of  the
       various	property  settings. The st driver is in the process of setting
       the property/parameter values for the tape drive using information from
       either the built-in table within the driver or from uncommented entries
       in the st.conf file. The effect on the system  may  be  that  the  tape
       drive  may be set with default or generic driver settings which may not
       be appropriate for the actual type of tape drive being used.

	 st_attach-RESUME: tape failure tape position will be lost

       On a resume after a power management suspend, the previously known tape
       position	 is  no	 longer	 valid. This can occur if the tape was changed
       while the system was in power management suspend.  The  operation  will
       not be retried.

	 Write Data Buffering has been deprecated. Your applications should
	 continue to work normally. However, they should be ported to use
	 Asynchronous I/O.

       Indicates that buffering has been removed from Solaris.

	 Cannot detach: fileno=%x, blkno=%lx

       The  st	driver cannot unload because the tape is not positioned at BOT
       (beginning of tape). May	 indicate  hardware  problems  with  the  tape
       drive.

	 Variable record length I/O
	 Fixed record length (%d byte blocks) I/O

       Tape-drives  can	 use  either  Fixed  or Variable record length. If the
       drive uses Fixed length records, then the built in  property  table  or
       the  st.conf  file will contain a non-zero record-length property. Most
       DAT, Exabyte and DLT drives support Variable record lengths.  Many  QIC
       format tape drives have historically been of Fixed record length.

	 Command will be retried
	  un_ncmds: %d can't retry cmd

       These   diagnostics   are   only	  seen	 with  tape  drives  with  the
       ST_RETRY_ON_RECOVERED_DEFERRED_ERROR bit set. See stdef.h for  explana‐
       tion of the specific usage of this setting.

WARNINGS
       Effective with Solaris 2.4, the ST_NO_RECSIZE_LIMIT flag is set for the
       built-in config entries of the  Archive	DAT  and  Exabyte  drivers  by
       default.	 (Refer to Large Record Sizes.) Tapes written with large block
       sizes prior to Solaris 2.4 may cause some applications to fail  if  the
       number  of  bytes returned by a read request is less than the requested
       block size (for example, asking for 128 Kbytes and receiving less  than
       64 Kbytes).

       The  ST_NO_RECSIZE_LIMIT	 flag  can be disabled in the config entry for
       the device as a work-around. (Refer to Tape Configuration.) This action
       disables	 the  ability  to  read	 and  write with large block sizes and
       allows the reading of tapes written prior to  Solaris  2.4  with	 large
       block sizes.

       (Refer to mtio(7I) for a description of maximum record sizes.)

BUGS
       Tape  devices that do not return a BUSY status during tape loading pre‐
       vent user commands from being held until the device is ready. The  user
       must  delay issuing any tape operations until the tape device is ready.
       This is not a problem for tape devices supplied by Sun Microsystems.

       Tape devices that do not report a blank	check  error  at  the  end  of
       recorded media may cause file positioning operations to fail. Some tape
       drives, for example, mistakenly report media  error  instead  of	 blank
       check error.

SunOS 5.11			  22 Oct 2008				st(7D)
[top]

List of man pages available for OpenIndiana

Copyright (c) for man pages and the logo by the respective OS vendor.

For those who want to learn more, the polarhome community provides shell access and support.

[legal] [privacy] [GNU] [policy] [cookies] [netiquette] [sponsors] [FAQ]
Tweet
Polarhome, production since 1999.
Member of Polarhome portal.
Based on Fawad Halim's script.
....................................................................
Vote for polarhome
Free Shell Accounts :: the biggest list on the net