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Unbelievable DLT firmware
On Wed, 03 Sep 2003 01:15:54 GMT, Darren Dunham
wrote: [ Snip ] Yes, this is actually not hard to believe at all. Remember when Sun's st driver would not allow you to write in high-density format on an Exabyte tape (i.e. the 8500's "4.6 GB" format) if you had previously written data on a the tape in low-density (i.e. the 8200's "2.3 GB" format)? If you erased the tape (and I believe even "mt erase" would work, but can't remember), then you could write in high-density format. I've never heard of this. Sun's st driver should have nothing to do with this at all. Shouldn't, but it sometimes does... It comes as a shock to some that occasionally software is broken. If the tape is written in the proper density at BOT, the density should change, otherwise the existing density is used. This is the same thing that happens with DLT tapes. The st driver is just setting the proper bits in the density page. Whether the drive chooses to use the density settings is another matter. IIRC (and it was a while ago) the driver was basically a the same as the one that handled the 8200, and it just didn't understand the subtleties of when you can or cannot change densities. I don't have an 8500 around, but I do have access to an 8505. I'll try to write to it in the different densities. Unfortunately, unlike most standalone DLTs, the 8500s don't have LEDs that show the current density settings on the tape. That was a while ago, and I believe the driver has been fixed... Still, there do exist devices that have initialization procedures which record out-of-band metadata on the media. Things can get royally messed up if the metadata is at odds with the attempted I/O operation (e.g. when the media is partially degaussed; it becomes nasty!). Malc. |
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On Wed, 03 Sep 2003 01:15:54 GMT, Darren Dunham
wrote: I've never heard of this. Sun's st driver should have nothing to do with this at all. Right. I didn't mean to say that it had an actual connection to the DLT firmware issue. I was just telling a story to illustrate how sometimes people release software that really does do something stupid. Even companies who you'd think/hope would know better. Unfortunately, unlike most standalone DLTs, the 8500s don't have LEDs that show the current density settings on the tape. I used an 8505 for a year or two (or was it an 8505XL?) before I realize that, actually, it does have a visual indicator of density. I can't remember the details, but I do recall that one of the LEDs is a multicolor one -- amber means one density, green means another. That is still not as helpful as the whole array of LEDs that a DLT drive gives you, but it's something. - Logan |
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