1 .\" Copyright (c) 2008, Sun Microsystems, Inc. All Rights Reserved 2 .\" Copyright 2018, Joyent, Inc. 3 .\" The contents of this file are subject to the terms of the 4 .\" Common Development and Distribution License (the "License"). 5 .\" You may not use this file except in compliance with the License. 6 .\" 7 .\" You can obtain a copy of the license at usr/src/OPENSOLARIS.LICENSE 8 .\" or http://www.opensolaris.org/os/licensing. 9 .\" See the License for the specific language governing permissions 10 .\" and limitations under the License. 11 .\" 12 .\" When distributing Covered Code, include this CDDL HEADER in each 13 .\" file and include the License file at usr/src/OPENSOLARIS.LICENSE. 14 .\" If applicable, add the following below this CDDL HEADER, with the 15 .\" fields enclosed by brackets "[]" replaced with your own identifying 16 .\" information: Portions Copyright [yyyy] [name of copyright owner] 17 .Dd August 31, 2018 18 .Dt MTIO 7I 19 .Os 20 .Sh NAME 21 .Nm mtio 22 .Nd general magnetic tape interface 23 .Sh SYNOPSIS 24 .In sys/types.h 25 .In sys/ioctl.h 26 .In sys/mtio.h 27 .Sh DESCRIPTION 28 1/2", 1/4", 4mm, and 8mm magnetic tape drives all share the same general 29 character device interface. 30 .Pp 31 There are two types of tape records: data records and end-of-file (EOF) 32 records. 33 .Sy EOF 34 records are also known as tape marks and file marks. 35 A record is separated by interrecord (or tape) gaps on a tape. 36 .Pp 37 End-of-recorded-media (EOM) is indicated by two 38 .Sy EOF 39 marks on 1/2\(dq tape; by one 40 .Sy EOF 41 mark on 1/4\(dq, 4mm, and 8mm cartridge tapes. 42 .Ss "1/2\(dq Reel Tape" 43 Data bytes are recorded in parallel onto the 9-track tape. 44 Since it is a 45 variable-length tape device, the number of bytes in a physical record may vary. 46 .Pp 47 The recording formats available (check specific tape drive) are 800 48 .Sy BPI , 49 1600 50 .Sy BPI , 51 6250 52 .Sy BPI , 53 and data compression. 54 Actual storage capacity is a function of the recording format and the length of the tape reel. 55 For example, using a 2400 foot tape, 20 Mbyte can be stored using 800 56 .Sy BPI , 57 40 Mbyte using 1600 58 .Sy BPI , 59 140 Mbyte using 6250 60 .Sy BPI , 61 or up to 700 Mbyte using data compression. 62 .Ss "1/4\(dq Cartridge Tape" 63 Data is recorded serially onto 1/4\(dq cartridge tape. 64 The number of bytes per 65 record is determined by the physical record size of the device. 66 The I/O request 67 size must be a multiple of the physical record size of the device. 68 For 69 .Sy QIC-11 , 70 .Sy QIC-24 , 71 and 72 .Sy QIC-150 73 tape drives, the block size is 512 bytes. 74 .Pp 75 The records are recorded on tracks in a serpentine motion. 76 As one track is 77 completed, the drive switches to the next and begins writing in the opposite 78 direction, eliminating the wasted motion of rewinding. 79 Each file, including the last, ends with one file mark. 80 .Pp 81 Storage capacity is based on the number of tracks the drive is capable of 82 recording. 83 For example, 4-track drives can only record 20 Mbyte of data on a 84 450 foot tape; 9-track drives can record up to 45 Mbyte of data on a tape of 85 the same length. 86 .Sy QIC-11 87 is the only tape format available for 4-track 88 tape drives. 89 In contrast, 9-track tape drives can use either 90 .Sy QIC-24 91 or 92 .Sy QIC-11 . 93 Storage capacity is not appreciably affected by using either format. 94 .Sy QIC-24 95 is preferable to 96 .Sy QIC-11 97 because it records a 98 reference signal to mark the position of the first track on the tape, and each 99 block has a unique block number. 100 .Pp 101 The 102 .Sy QIC-150 103 tape drives require 104 .Sy DC-6150 105 (or equivalent) tape cartridges for writing. 106 However, they can read other tape cartridges in 107 .Sy QIC-11 , 108 .Sy QIC-24 , 109 or 110 .Sy QIC-120 111 tape formats. 112 .Ss "8mm Cartridge Tape" 113 Data is recorded serially onto 8mm helical scan cartridge tape. 114 Since it is a 115 variable-length tape device, the number of bytes in a physical record may 116 vary. 117 The recording formats available (check specific tape drive) are standard 118 2Gbyte, 5Gbyte, and compressed format. 119 .Ss "4mm DAT Tape" 120 Data is recorded either in Digital Data Storage (DDS) tape format or in Digital 121 Data Storage, Data Compressed (DDS-DC) tape format. 122 Since it is a 123 variable-length tape device, the number of bytes in a physical record may vary. 124 The recording formats available are standard 2Gbyte and compressed format. 125 .Ss "Persistent Error Handling" 126 Persistent error handling is a modification of the current error handling 127 behaviors, BSD and SVR4. 128 With persistent error handling enabled, all tape 129 operations after an error or exception will return immediately with an error. 130 Persistent error handling can be most useful with asynchronous tape operations 131 that use the 132 .Xr aioread 3C 133 and 134 .Xr aiowrite 3C 135 functions. 136 .Pp 137 To enable persistent error handling, the ioctl 138 .Dv MTIOCPERSISTENT 139 must be issued. 140 If this ioctl succeeds, then persistent error handling is enabled and 141 changes the current error behavior. 142 This ioctl will fail if the device driver 143 does not support persistent error handling. 144 .Pp 145 With persistent error handling enabled, all tape operations after an exception 146 or error will return with the same error as the first command that failed; the 147 operations will not be executed. 148 An exception is some event that might stop 149 normal tape operations, such as an End Of File (EOF) mark or an End Of Tape 150 (EOT) mark. 151 An example of an error is a media error. 152 The 153 .Dv MTIOCLRERR 154 ioctl must be issued to allow normal tape operations to continue and to clear 155 the error. 156 .Pp 157 Disabling persistent error handling returns the error behavior to normal SVR4 158 error handling, and will not occur until all outstanding operations are 159 completed. 160 Applications should wait for all outstanding operations to complete 161 before disabling persistent error handling. 162 Closing the device will also 163 disable persistent error handling and clear any errors or exceptions. 164 .Pp 165 The 166 .Sx Read Operation 167 and 168 .Sx Write Operation 169 subsections contain more pertinent information reguarding persistent error handling. 170 .Ss "Read Operation" 171 The 172 .Xr read 2 173 function reads the next record on the tape. 174 The record size is passed back as the number of bytes read, provided it is not 175 greater than the number requested. 176 When a tape mark or end of data is read, a zero byte count is 177 returned; all successive reads after the zero read will return an error and 178 .Va errno 179 will be set to 180 .Er EIO . 181 To move to the next file, an 182 .Dv MTFSF 183 ioctl can be issued before or after the read causing the error. 184 This error 185 handling behavior is different from the older 186 .Sy BSD 187 behavior, where another read will fetch the first record of the next tape file. 188 If the 189 .Sy BSD 190 behavior is required, device names containing the letter 191 .Ql b 192 (for 193 .Sy BSD 194 behavior) in the final component should be used. 195 If persistent error handling 196 was enabled with either the BSD or SVR4 tape device behavior, all operations 197 after this read error will return 198 .Er EIO 199 errors until the 200 .Dv MTIOCLRERR 201 ioctl is issued. 202 An 203 .Dv MTFSF 204 ioctl can then he issued. 205 .Pp 206 Two successful successive reads that both return zero byte counts indicate 207 .Sy EOM 208 on the tape. 209 No further reading should be performed past the 210 .Sy EOM . 211 .Pp 212 Fixed-length I/O tape devices require the number of bytes read to be a multiple 213 of the physical record size. 214 For example, 1/4\(dq cartridge tape devices only read 215 multiples of 512 bytes. 216 If the blocking factor is greater than 64,512 bytes 217 (minphys limit), fixed-length I/O tape devices read multiple records. 218 .Pp 219 Most tape devices which support variable-length I/O operations may read a range 220 of 1 to 65,535 bytes. 221 If the record size exceeds 65,535 bytes, the driver reads 222 multiple records to satisfy the request. 223 These multiple records are limited to 224 65,534 bytes. 225 Newer variable-length tape drivers may relax the above limitation 226 and allow applications to read record sizes larger than 65,534. 227 Refer to the 228 specific tape driver man page for details. 229 .Pp 230 Reading past logical 231 .Sy EOT 232 is transparent to the user. 233 A read operation 234 should never hit physical EOT. 235 .Pp 236 Read requests that are lesser than a physical tape record are not allowed. 237 Appropriate error is returned. 238 .Ss "Write Operation" 239 The 240 .Xr write 2 241 function writes the next record on the tape. 242 The record has 243 the same length as the given buffer. 244 .Pp 245 Writing is allowed on 1/4" tape at either the beginning of tape or after the 246 last written file on the tape. 247 With the Exabyte 8200, data may be appended only 248 at the beginning of tape, before a filemark, or after the last written file on 249 the tape. 250 .Pp 251 Writing is not so restricted on 1/2\(dq, 4mm, and the other 8mm cartridge tape 252 drives. 253 Care should be used when appending files onto 1/2\(dq reel tape devices, 254 since an extra file mark is appended after the last file to mark the 255 .Sy EOM . 256 This extra file mark must be overwritten to prevent the creation of a null file. 257 To facilitate write append operations, a space to the 258 .Sy EOM 259 ioctl is provided. 260 Care should be taken when overwriting records; the erase head is just 261 forward of the write head and any following records will also be erased. 262 .Pp 263 Fixed-length I/O tape devices require the number of bytes written to be a 264 multiple of the physical record size. 265 For example, 1/4\(dq cartridge tape devices 266 only write multiples of 512 bytes. 267 .Pp 268 Fixed-length I/O tape devices write multiple records if the blocking factor is 269 greater than 64,512 bytes (minphys limit). 270 These multiple writes are limited to 271 64,512 bytes. 272 For example, if a write request is issued for 65,536 bytes using 273 a 1/4\(dq cartridge tape, two writes are issued; the first for 64,512 bytes and 274 the second for 1024 bytes. 275 .Pp 276 Most tape devices which support variable-length I/O operations may write a 277 range of 1 to 65,535 bytes. 278 If the record size exceeds 65,535 bytes, the driver 279 writes multiple records to satisfy the request. 280 These multiple records are 281 limited to 65,534 bytes. 282 As an example, if a write request for 65,540 bytes is 283 issued, two records are written; one for 65,534 bytes followed by another 284 record for 6 bytes. 285 Newer variable-length tape drivers may relax the above 286 limitation and allow applications to write record sizes larger than 65,534. 287 effer to the specific tape driver man page for details. 288 .Pp 289 When logical 290 .Sy EOT 291 is encountered during a write, that write operation 292 completes and the number of bytes successfully transferred is returned (note 293 that a 'short write' may have occurred and not all the requested bytes would 294 have been transferred. 295 The actual amount of data written will depend on the 296 type of device being used). 297 The next write will return a zero byte count. 298 A third write will successfully transfer some bytes (as indicated by the 299 returned byte count, which again could be a short write); the fourth will 300 transfer zero bytes, and so on, until the physical 301 .Sy EOT 302 is reached and all writes will 303 fail with 304 .Er EIO . 305 .Pp 306 When logical 307 .Sy EOT 308 is encountered with persistent error handling enabled, 309 the current write may complete or be a short write. 310 The next write will return a zero byte count. 311 At this point an application should act appropriately for 312 end of tape cleanup or issue yet another write, which will return the error 313 .Er ENOSPC . 314 After clearing the exception with 315 .Dv MTIOCLRERR , 316 the next write will succeed (possibly short), followed by another zero byte 317 write count, and then another 318 .Er ENOSPC 319 error. 320 .Pp 321 Allowing writes after 322 .Sy EOT 323 has been encountered enables the flushing of buffers. 324 However, it is strongly recommended to terminate the writing and close 325 the file as soon as possible. 326 .Pp 327 Seeks are ignored in tape I/O. 328 .Ss "Close Operation" 329 Magnetic tapes are rewound when closed, except when the "no-rewind" devices 330 have been specified. 331 The names of no-rewind device files use the letter 332 .Ql n 333 as the end of the final component. 334 The no-rewind version of 335 .Pa /dev/rmt/0l 336 is 337 .Pa /dev/rmt/0ln . 338 In case of error for a no-rewind device, the next open rewinds the device. 339 .Pp 340 If the driver was opened for reading and a no-rewind device has been specified, 341 the close advances the tape past the next filemark (unless the current file 342 position is at 343 .Sy EOM ) , 344 leaving the tape correctly positioned to read the first record of the next file. 345 However, if the tape is at the first record of a 346 file it doesn't advance again to the first record of the next file. 347 These semantics are different from the older 348 .Sy BSD 349 behavior. 350 If 351 .Sy BSD 352 behavior is required where no implicit space operation is executed on close, 353 the non-rewind device name containing the letter 354 .Ql b 355 (for 356 .Sy BSD 357 behavior) in the final component should be specified. 358 .Pp 359 If data was written, a file mark is automatically written by the driver upon 360 close. 361 If the rewinding device was specified, the tape will be rewound after 362 the file mark is written. 363 If the user wrote a file mark prior to closing, then 364 no file mark is written upon close. 365 If a file positioning ioctl, like rewind, 366 is issued after writing, a file mark is written before repositioning the tape. 367 .Pp 368 All buffers are flushed on closing a tape device. 369 Hence, it is strongly recommended that the application wait for all buffers to 370 be flushed before closing the device. 371 This can be done by writing a filemark via 372 .Dv MTWEOF , 373 even with a zero count. 374 .Pp 375 Note that for 1/2\(dq reel tape devices, two file marks are written to mark the 376 .Sy EOM 377 before rewinding or performing a file positioning ioctl. 378 If the user 379 wrote a file mark before closing a 1/2\(dq reel tape device, the driver will 380 always write a file mark before closing to insure that the end of recorded 381 media is marked properly. 382 If the non-rewinding device was specified, two file 383 marks are written and the tape is left positioned between the two so that the 384 second one is overwritten on a subsequent 385 .Xr open 2 386 and 387 .Xr write 2 . 388 .Pp 389 If no data was written and the driver was opened for 390 .Sy WRITE-ONLY 391 access, one or two file marks are written, thus creating a null file. 392 .Pp 393 After closing the device, persistent error handling will be disabled and any 394 error or exception will be cleared. 395 .Sh IOCTLS 396 Not all devices support all 397 .Sy ioctls . 398 The driver returns an 399 .Er ENOTTY 400 error on unsupported ioctls. 401 .Pp 402 The following structure definitions for magnetic tape 403 .Xr ioctl 2 404 commands are from 405 .In sys/mtio.h . 406 .Pp 407 The minor device byte structure is: 408 .Bd -literal 409 15 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 410 ________________________________________________________________________ 411 Unit # BSD Reserved Density Density No rewind Unit # 412 Bits 7-15 behavior Select Select on Close Bits 0-1 413 .Ed 414 .Bd -literal 415 /* 416 * Layout of minor device byte: 417 */ 418 #define MTUNIT(dev) (((minor(dev) & 0xff80) >> 5) + (minor(dev) & 0x3)) 419 #define MT_NOREWIND (1 <<2) 420 #define MT_DENSITY_MASK (3 <<3) 421 #define MT_DENSITY1 (0 <<3) /* Lowest density/format */ 422 #define MT_DENSITY2 (1 <<3) 423 #define MT_DENSITY3 (2 <<3) 424 #define MT_DENSITY4 (3 <<3) /* Highest density/format */ 425 #define MTMINOR(unit) (((unit & 0x7fc) << 5) + (unit & 0x3)) 426 #define MT_BSD (1 <<6) /* BSD behavior on close */ 427 428 /* Structure for MTIOCTOP - magnetic tape operation command */ 429 430 struct mtop { 431 short mt_op; /* operation */ 432 daddr_t mt_count; /* number of operations */ 433 }; 434 435 /* Structure for MTIOCLTOP - magnetic tape operation command */ 436 Works exactly like MTIOCTOP except passes 64 bit mt_count values. 437 struct mtlop { 438 short mt_op; 439 short pad[3]; 440 int64_t mt_count; 441 }; 442 .Ed 443 .Pp 444 The following operations of 445 .Dv MTIOCTOP 446 and 447 .Dv MTIOCLTOP 448 ioctls are supported: 449 .Pp 450 .Bl -tag -width MTIOCGETERROR -compact -offset 2n 451 .It Dv MTWEOF 452 Write an end-of-file record 453 .It Dv MTFSF 454 Forward space over file mark 455 .It Dv MTBSF 456 Backward space over file mark (1/2", 8mm only) 457 .It Dv MTFSR 458 Forward space to inter-record gap 459 .It Dv MTBSR 460 Backward space to inter-record gap 461 .It Dv MTREW 462 Rewind 463 .It Dv MTOFFL 464 Rewind and take the drive off-line 465 .It Dv MTNOP 466 No operation, sets status only 467 .It Dv MTRETEN 468 Retension the tape (cartridge tape only) 469 .It Dv MTERASE 470 Erase the entire tape and rewind 471 .It Dv MTEOM 472 Position to EOM 473 .It Dv MTNBSF 474 Backward space file to beginning of file 475 .It Dv MTSRSZ 476 Set record size 477 .It Dv MTGRSZ 478 Get record size 479 .It Dv MTTELL 480 Get current position 481 .It Dv MTSEEK 482 Go to requested position 483 .It Dv MTFSSF 484 Forward to requested number of sequential file marks 485 .It Dv MTBSSF 486 Backward to requested number of sequential file marks 487 .It Dv MTLOCK 488 Prevent media removal 489 .It Dv MTUNLOCK 490 Allow media removal 491 .It Dv MTLOAD 492 Load the next tape cartridge into the tape drive 493 .It Dv MTIOCGETERROR 494 Retrieve error records from the st driver 495 .El 496 .Bd -literal -offset 2n 497 /* structure for MTIOCGET - magnetic tape get status command */ 498 499 struct mtget { 500 short mt_type; /* type of magtape device */ 501 502 /* the following two registers are device dependent */ 503 short mt_dsreg; /* "drive status" register */ 504 short mt_erreg; /* "error" register */ 505 506 /* optional error info. */ 507 daddr_t mt_resid; /* residual count */ 508 daddr_t mt_fileno; /* file number of current position */ 509 daddr_t mt_blkno; /* block number of current position */ 510 ushort_t mt_flags; 511 short mt_bf; /* optimum blocking factor */ 512 }; 513 514 /* structure for MTIOCGETDRIVETYPE - get tape config data command */ 515 struct mtdrivetype_request { 516 int size; 517 struct mtdrivetype *mtdtp; 518 }; 519 struct mtdrivetype { 520 char name[64]; /* Name, for debug */ 521 char vid[25]; /* Vendor id and product id */ 522 char type; /* Drive type for driver */ 523 int bsize; /* Block size */ 524 int options; /* Drive options */ 525 int max_rretries; /* Max read retries */ 526 int max_wretries; /* Max write retries */ 527 uchar_t densities[MT_NDENSITIES]; /* density codes,low->hi */ 528 uchar_t default_density; /* Default density chosen */ 529 uchar_t speeds[MT_NSPEEDS]; /* speed codes, low->hi */ 530 ushort_t non_motion_timeout; /* Seconds for non-motion */ 531 ushort_t io_timeout; /* Seconds for data to from tape */ 532 ushort_t rewind_timeout; /* Seconds to rewind */ 533 ushort_t space_timeout; /* Seconds to space anywhere */ 534 ushort_t load_timeout; /* Seconds to load tape and ready */ 535 ushort_t unload_timeout; /* Seconds to unload */ 536 ushort_t erase_timeout; /* Seconds to do long erase */ 537 }; 538 .Ed 539 .Bd -literal -offset 2n 540 /* structure for MTIOCGETPOS and MTIOCRESTPOS - get/set tape position */ 541 /* 542 * eof/eot/eom codes. 543 */ 544 typedef enum { 545 ST_NO_EOF, 546 ST_EOF_PENDING, /* filemrk pending */ 547 ST_EOF, /* at filemark */ 548 ST_EOT_PENDING, /* logical eot pend. */ 549 ST_EOT, /* at logical eot */ 550 ST_EOM, /* at physical eot */ 551 ST_WRITE_AFTER_EOM /* flag allowing writes after EOM */ 552 } pstatus; 553 554 typedef enum { invalid, legacy, logical } posmode; 555 556 typedef struct tapepos { 557 uint64_t lgclblkno; /* Blks from start of partition */ 558 int32_t fileno; /* Num. of current file */ 559 int32_t blkno; /* Blk number in current file */ 560 int32_t partition; /* Current partition */ 561 pstatus eof; /* eof states */ 562 posmode pmode; /* which pos. data is valid */ 563 char pad[4]; 564 } tapepos_t; 565 .Ed 566 .Pp 567 .Bd -ragged -compact 568 If the 569 .Fa pmode 570 is legacy, 571 .Fa fileno 572 and 573 .Fa blkno 574 fields are valid. 575 .Pp 576 If the 577 .Fa pmode 578 is logical, 579 .Fa lgclblkno 580 field is valid. 581 .Ed 582 .Pp 583 The 584 .Dv MTWEOF 585 ioctl is used for writing file marks to tape. 586 Not only does 587 this signify the end of a file, but also usually has the side effect of 588 flushing all buffers in the tape drive to the tape medium. 589 A zero count 590 .Dv MTWEOF 591 will just flush all the buffers and will not write any file marks. 592 Because a successful completion of this tape operation will guarantee that all 593 tape data has been written to the tape medium, it is recommended that this tape 594 operation be issued before closing a tape device. 595 .Pp 596 When spacing forward over a record (either data or 597 .Sy EOF ) , 598 the tape head is 599 positioned in the tape gap between the record just skipped and the next record. 600 When spacing forward over file marks (EOF records), the tape head is positioned 601 in the tape gap between the next 602 .Sy EOF 603 record and the record that follows it. 604 .Pp 605 When spacing backward over a record (either data or 606 .Sy EOF ) , 607 the tape head is positioned in the tape gap immediately preceding the tape 608 record where the tape head is currently positioned. 609 When spacing backward over file marks (EOF records), the tape head is 610 positioned in the tape gap preceding the 611 .Sy EOF . 612 Thus the next read would fetch the 613 .Sy EOF . 614 .Pp 615 Record skipping does not go past a file mark; file skipping does not go past 616 the 617 .Sy EOM . 618 After an 619 .Dv MTFSR 620 <huge number> command, the driver leaves 621 the tape logically positioned 622 .Em before 623 the 624 .Sy EOF . 625 A related feature is that 626 .Sy EOF Ns s 627 remain pending until the tape is closed. 628 For example, a program 629 which first reads all the records of a file up to and including the \fBEOF\fR 630 and then performs an 631 .Dv MTFSF 632 command will leave the tape positioned just 633 after that same 634 .Sy EOF , 635 rather than skipping the next file. 636 .Pp 637 The 638 .Dv MTNBSF 639 and 640 .Dv MTFSF 641 operations are inverses. 642 Thus, an 643 .Dq Dv MTFSF \(mi1 644 is equivalent to an 645 .Dq Dv MTNBSF 1 . 646 An 647 .Dq Dv MTNBSF 0 648 is the same as 649 .Dq Dv MTFSF 0 ; 650 both position the tape device at the beginning of the current file. 651 .Pp 652 .Dv MTBSF 653 moves the tape backwards by file marks. 654 The tape position will end 655 on the beginning of the tape side of the desired file mark. 656 An 657 .Dq Dv MTBSF 0 658 will position the tape at the end of the current file, before the filemark. 659 .Pp 660 .Dv MTBSR 661 and 662 .Dv MTFSR 663 operations perform much like space file operations, 664 except that they move by records instead of files. 665 Variable-length I/O devices 666 (1/2\(dq reel, for example) space actual records; fixed-length I/O devices space 667 physical records (blocks). 668 1/4\(dq cartridge tape, for example, spaces 512 byte 669 physical records. 670 The status ioctl residual count contains the number of files 671 or records not skipped. 672 .Pp 673 .Dv MTFSSF 674 and 675 .Dv MTBSSF 676 space forward or backward, respectively, to the next 677 occurrence of the requested number of file marks, one following another. 678 If there are more sequential file marks on tape than were requested, it spaces 679 over the requested number and positions after the requested file mark. 680 Note that not all drives support this command and if a request is sent to a 681 drive that does not, 682 .Er ENOTTY 683 is returned. 684 .Pp 685 .Dv MTOFFL 686 rewinds and, if appropriate, takes the device off-line by unloading the tape. 687 It is recommended that the device be closed after offlining 688 and then re-opened after a tape has been inserted to facilitate portability to 689 other platforms and other operating systems. 690 Attempting to re-open the device 691 with no tape will result in an error unless the 692 .Dv O_NDELAY 693 flag is used. 694 .Po 695 See 696 .Xr open 2 . 697 .Pc 698 .Pp 699 The 700 .Dv MTRETEN 701 retension ioctl applies only to 1/4\(dq cartridge tape devices. 702 It is used to restore tape tension, improving the tape's soft error rate after 703 extensive start-stop operations or long-term storage. 704 .Pp 705 .Dv MTERASE 706 rewinds the tape, erases it completely, and returns to the 707 beginning of tape. 708 Erasing may take a long time depending on the device and/or 709 tapes. 710 For time details, refer to the drive specific manual. 711 .Pp 712 .Dv MTEOM 713 positions the tape at a location just after the last file written 714 on the tape. 715 For 1/4\(dq cartridge and 8mm tape, this is after the last file mark 716 on the tape. 717 For 1/2\(dq reel tape, this is just after the first file mark but 718 before the second (and last) file mark on the tape. 719 Additional files can then 720 be appended onto the tape from that point. 721 .Pp 722 Note the difference between 723 .Dv MTBSF 724 (backspace over file mark) and 725 .Dv MTNBSF 726 (backspace file to beginning of file). 727 The former moves the tape 728 backward until it crosses an 729 .Sy EOF 730 mark, leaving the tape positioned 731 .Em before 732 the file mark. 733 The latter leaves the tape positioned 734 .Em after 735 the file mark. 736 Hence, 737 .Dq Dv MTNBSF n 738 is equivalent to 739 .Dq Dv MTBSF (n+1) 740 followed by 741 .Dq Dv MTFSF 1 . 742 The 1/4\(dq cartridge tape devices do not support 743 .Dv MTBSF . 744 .Pp 745 .Dv MTSRSZ 746 and 747 .Dv MTGRSZ 748 are used to set and get fixed record lengths. 749 The 750 .Dv MTSRSZ 751 ioctl allows variable length and fixed length tape drives that 752 support multiple record sizes to set the record length. 753 The 754 .Fa mt_count 755 field of the 756 .Vt mtop 757 struct is used to pass the record size to/from the 758 .Xr st 7D 759 driver. 760 A value of 761 .Ql 0 762 indicates variable record size. 763 The 764 .Dv MTSRSZ 765 ioctl makes a variable-length tape device behave like a 766 fixed-length tape device. 767 Refer to the specific tape driver man page for 768 details. 769 .Pp 770 .Dv MTLOAD 771 loads the next tape cartridge into the tape drive. 772 This is generally only used with stacker and tower type tape drives which handle 773 multiple tapes per tape drive. 774 A tape device without a tape inserted can be 775 opened with the 776 .Dv O_NDELAY 777 flag, in order to execute this operation. 778 .Pp 779 .Dv MTIOCGETERROR 780 allows user-level applications to retrieve error records 781 from the 782 .Xr st 7D 783 driver. 784 An error record consists of the SCSI command cdb 785 which causes the error and a 786 .Xr scsi_arq_status 9S 787 structure if available. 788 The user-level application is responsible for allocating and releasing the 789 memory for 790 .Fa mtee_cdb_buf 791 and 792 .Fa scsi_arq_status of each 793 .Vt mterror_entry . 794 Before issuing the ioctl, the 795 .Fa mtee_arq_status_len 796 value should be at least equal to 797 .Ql sizeof (struct scsi_arq_status) . 798 If more sense data than the size of 799 .Xr scsi_arq_status 9S 800 is desired, the 801 .Fa mtee_arq_status_len 802 may be larger than 803 .Ql sizeof (struct scsi_arq_status) 804 by the amount of additional extended sense data desired. 805 The 806 .Fa es_add_len 807 field of 808 .Xr scsi_extended_sense 9S 809 can be used to determine the amount of valid sense data returned by the device. 810 .Pp 811 The 812 .Dv MTIOCGET 813 get status 814 .Xr ioctl 2 815 call returns the drive ID 816 .Pq Fa mt_type , 817 sense key error 818 .Pq Fa mt_erreg , 819 file number 820 .Pq Fa mt_fileno , 821 optimum blocking factor 822 .Pq Fa mt_bf 823 and record number 824 .Pq Fa mt_blkno 825 of the last error. 826 The residual count 827 .Pq Fa mt_resid 828 is set to the number of bytes not transferred or files/records not spaced. 829 The flags word 830 .Pq Fa mt_flags 831 contains information indicating if the device is SCSI, if the device is a reel 832 device and whether the device supports absolute file positioning. 833 The 834 .Fa mt_flags 835 also indicates if the device is requesting cleaning media be used, whether the 836 device is capable of reporting the requirement of cleaning media and if the 837 currently loaded media is WORM (Write Once Read Many) media. 838 .Pp 839 Note \(em When tape alert cleaning is managed by the st driver, the tape 840 target driver may continue to return a 841 .Dq drive needs cleaning 842 status unless an 843 .Dv MTIOCGE 844 .Xr ioct 2 845 call is made while the cleaning media is in the drive. 846 .Pp 847 The 848 .Dv MTIOCGETDRIVETYPE 849 get drivetype ioctl call returns the name of the 850 tape drive as defined in 851 .Pa st.conf 852 .Pq Fa name , 853 Vendor 854 .Sy ID 855 and model 856 .Pq Fa product , 857 .Sy ID 858 .Pq Fa vid , 859 type of tape device 860 .Pq Fa type , 861 block size 862 .Pq Fa size , 863 drive options 864 .Pq Fa options , 865 maximum read retry count 866 .Pq Fa max_rretries , 867 maximum write retry count 868 .Pq Fa max_wretries , 869 densities supported by the drive 870 .Pq Fa densities , 871 and default density of the tape drive 872 .Pq Fa default_density . 873 .Pp 874 The 875 .Dv MTIOCGETPOS 876 ioctl returns the current tape position of the drive. 877 It is returned in struct tapepos as defined in 878 .Pa /usr/include/sys/scsi/targets/stdef.h . 879 .Pp 880 The 881 .Dv MTIOCRESTPOS 882 ioctl restores a saved position from the 883 .Dv MTIOCGETPOS . 884 .Ss "Persistent Error Handling IOCTLs and Asynchronous Tape Operations" 885 .Bl -tag -width MTIOCPERSISTENTSTATUS -compact 886 .It Dv MTIOCPERSISTENT 887 enables/disables persistent error handling 888 .It Dv MTIOCPERSISTENTSTATUS 889 queries for persistent error handling 890 .It Dv MTIOCLRERR 891 clears persistent error handling 892 .It Dv MTIOCGUARANTEEDORDER 893 checks whether driver guarantees order of I/O's 894 .El 895 .Pp 896 The 897 .Dv MTIOCPERSISTENT 898 ioctl enables or disables persistent error handling. 899 It takes as an argument a pointer to an integer that turns it either on or off. 900 If the ioctl succeeds, the desired operation was successful. 901 It will wait for 902 all outstanding I/O's to complete before changing the persistent error handling 903 status. 904 For example, 905 .Bd -literal -offset 2n 906 int on = 1; 907 ioctl(fd, MTIOCPERSISTENT, &on); 908 int off = 0; 909 ioctl(fd, MTIOCPERSISTENT, &off); 910 .Ed 911 .Pp 912 The 913 .Dv MTIOCPERSISTENTSTATUS 914 ioctl enables or disables persistent error 915 handling. 916 It takes as an argument a pointer to an integer inserted by the 917 driver. 918 The integer can be either 1 if persistent error handling is 919 .Sq on , 920 or 0 if persistent error handling is 921 .Sq off . 922 It will not wait for outstanding I/O's. 923 For example, 924 .Bd -literal -offset 2n 925 int query; 926 ioctl(fd, MTIOCPERSISTENTSTATUS, &query); 927 .Ed 928 .Pp 929 The 930 .Dv MTIOCLRERR 931 ioctl clears persistent error handling and allows tape 932 operations to continual normally. 933 This ioctl requires no argument and will 934 always succeed, even if persistent error handling has not been enabled. 935 It will wait for any outstanding I/O's before it clears the error. 936 .Pp 937 The 938 .Dv MTIOCGUARANTEEDORDER 939 ioctl is used to determine whether the driver 940 guarantees the order of I/O's. 941 It takes no argument. 942 If the ioctl succeeds, the driver will support guaranteed order. 943 If the driver does not support guaranteed order, then it should not be used 944 for asynchronous I/O with 945 .Xr libaio 3lib . 946 It will wait for any outstanding I/O's before it returns. 947 For example, 948 .Bd -literal -offset 2n 949 ioctl(fd, MTIOCGUARANTEEDORDER) 950 .Ed 951 .Pp 952 See the 953 .Sx Persistent Error Handling 954 subsection above for more information on persistent error handling. 955 .Ss "Asynchronous and State Change IOCTLS" 956 .Bl -tag -width 1n 957 .It Dv MTIOCSTATE 958 This ioctl blocks until the state of the drive, inserted or ejected, is 959 changed. 960 The argument is a pointer to a 961 .Vt enum mtio_state , 962 whose possible enumerations are listed below. 963 The initial value should be either the last reported state of the drive, or 964 .Dv MTIO_NONE . 965 Upon return, the 966 enum pointed to by the argument is updated with the current state of the drive. 967 .Bd -literal -offset 2n 968 enum mtio_state { 969 MTIO_NONE /* Return tape's current state */ 970 MTIO_EJECTED /* Tape state is "ejected" */ 971 MTIO_INSERTED /* Tape state is "inserted" */ 972 }; 973 .Ed 974 .El 975 .Pp 976 When using asynchronous operations, most ioctls will wait for all outstanding 977 commands to complete before they are executed. 978 .Ss "IOCTLS for Multi-initiator Configurations" 979 .Bl -tag -width MTIOCFORCERESERVE -compact 980 .It Dv MTIOCRESERVE 981 reserve the tape drive 982 .It Dv MTIOCRELEASE 983 revert back to the default behavior of reserve on open/release on close 984 .It Dv MTIOCFORCERESERVE 985 reserve the tape unit by breaking reservation held by another host 986 .El 987 .Pp 988 The 989 .Dv MTIOCRESERVE 990 ioctl reserves the tape drive such that it does not 991 release the tape drive at close. 992 This changes the default behavior of releasing the device upon close. 993 Reserving the tape drive that is already reserved has no effect. 994 For example, 995 .Bd -literal -offset 2n 996 ioctl(fd, MTIOCRESERVE); 997 .Ed 998 .Pp 999 The 1000 .Dv MTIOCRELEASE 1001 ioctl reverts back to the default behavior of reserve on 1002 open/release on close operation, and a release will occur during the next 1003 close. 1004 Releasing the tape drive that is already released has no effect. 1005 For example, 1006 .Bd -literal -offset 2n 1007 ioctl(fd, MTIOCRELEASE); 1008 .Ed 1009 .Pp 1010 The 1011 .Dv MTIOCFORCERESERVE 1012 ioctl breaks a reservation held by another host, interrupting any I/O in 1013 progress by that other host, and then reserves the tape unit. 1014 This ioctl can be executed only with super-user privileges. 1015 It is recommended to open the tape device in 1016 .Dv O_NDELAY 1017 mode when this ioctl needs to be executed, otherwise the open will fail if 1018 another host indeed has it reserved. 1019 For example, 1020 .Bd -literal -offset 2n 1021 ioctl(fd, MTIOCFORCERESERVE); 1022 .Ed 1023 .Ss "IOCTLS for Handling Tape Configuration Options" 1024 .Bl -tag -width MTIOCREADIGNOREEOFS 1025 .It Dv MTIOCSHORTFMK 1026 enables/disables support for writing short filemarks. 1027 This is specific to Exabyte drives. 1028 .It Dv MTIOCREADIGNOREILI 1029 enables/disables suppress incorrect length indicator (SILI) support during reads 1030 .It Dv MTIOCREADIGNOREEOFS 1031 enables/disables support for reading past two EOF marks which otherwise indicate 1032 End-Of-recording-Media (EOM) in the case of 1/2\(dq reel tape drives 1033 .El 1034 .Pp 1035 The 1036 .Dv MTIOCSHORTFMK 1037 ioctl enables or disables support for short filemarks. 1038 This ioctl is only applicable to Exabyte drives which support short filemarks. 1039 As an argument, it takes a pointer to an integer. 1040 If 0 (zero) is the specified integer, then long filemarks will be written. 1041 If 1 is the specified integer, then short filemarks will be written. 1042 The specified tape behavior will be in effect until the device is closed. 1043 .Pp 1044 For example: 1045 .Bd -literal -offset 2n 1046 int on = 1; 1047 int off = 0; 1048 /* enable short filemarks */ 1049 ioctl(fd, MTIOSHORTFMK, &on); 1050 /* disable short filemarks */ 1051 ioctl(fd, MTIOCSHORTFMK, &off); 1052 .Ed 1053 .Pp 1054 Tape drives which do not support short filemarks will return an 1055 .Va errno 1056 of 1057 .Er ENOTTY . 1058 .Pp 1059 The 1060 .Dv MTIOCREADIGNOREILI 1061 ioctl enables or disables the suppress incorrect 1062 length indicator (SILI) support during reads. 1063 As an argument, it takes a pointer to an integer. 1064 If 0 (zero) is the specified integer, SILI will not be 1065 used during reads and incorrect length indicator will not be suppressed. 1066 If 1 is the specified integer, SILI will be used during reads and incorrect 1067 length indicator will be suppressed. 1068 The specified tape behavior will be in effect until the device is closed. 1069 .Pp 1070 For example: 1071 .Bd -literal -offset 2n 1072 int on = 1; 1073 int off = 0; 1074 ioctl(fd, MTIOREADIGNOREILI, &on); 1075 ioctl(fd, MTIOREADIGNOREILI, &off); 1076 .Ed 1077 .Pp 1078 The 1079 .Dv MTIOCREADIGNOREEOFS 1080 ioctl enables or disables support for reading 1081 past double EOF marks which otherwise indicate End-Of-recorded-media (EOM) in 1082 the case of 1/2\(dq reel tape drives. 1083 As an argument, it takes a pointer to an integer. 1084 If 0 (zero) is the specified integer, then double EOF marks indicate 1085 End-Of-recodred-media (EOD). 1086 If 1 is the specified integer, the double EOF marks no longer indicate EOM, 1087 thus allowing applications to read past two EOF marks. 1088 In this case it is the responsibility of the application to detect 1089 end-of-recorded-media (EOM). 1090 The specified tape behavior will be in effect until the device is closed. 1091 .Pp 1092 For example: 1093 .Bd -literal -offset 2n 1094 int on = 1; 1095 int off = 0; 1096 ioctl(fd, MTIOREADIGNOREEOFS, &on); 1097 ioctl(fd, MTIOREADIGNOREEOFS, &off); 1098 .Ed 1099 .Pp 1100 Tape drives other than 1/2\(dq reel tapes will return an 1101 .Va errno 1102 of 1103 .Er ENOTTY . 1104 .Sh FILES 1105 .Pa /dev/rmt/ Ns Ao unit number Ac \ 1106 Ns Ao density Ac \ 1107 Ns Bo Ao BSD behavior Ac Bc \ 1108 Ns Bo Ao no rewind Ac Bc 1109 .Pp 1110 Where 1111 .Aq density 1112 can be 1113 .Ql l , 1114 .Ql m , 1115 .Ql h , 1116 .Ql u/c 1117 (low, medium, high, ultra/compressed, respectively), the 1118 .Aq BSD behavior 1119 option is 1120 .Ql b , and the 1121 .Aq no rewind 1122 option is 1123 .Ql n . 1124 .Pp 1125 For example, 1126 .Pa /dev/rmt/0hbn 1127 specifies unit 0, high density, 1128 .Sy BSD 1129 behavior and no rewind. 1130 .Sh EXAMPLES 1131 .Bl -inset 1132 .It Sy Example 1 1133 Tape Positioning and Tape Drives 1134 .Pp 1135 Suppose you have written three files to the non-rewinding 1/2\(dq tape device, 1136 .Pa /dev/rmt/0ln , 1137 and that you want to go back and 1138 .Xr dd 1M 1139 the second file off the tape. 1140 The commands to do this are: 1141 .Bd -literal -offset 2n 1142 mt -F /dev/rmt/0lbn bsf 3 1143 mt -F /dev/rmt/0lbn fsf 1 1144 dd if=/dev/rmt/0ln 1145 .Ed 1146 .Pp 1147 To accomplish the same tape positioning in a C program, followed by a get 1148 status ioctl: 1149 .Bd -literal -offset 2n 1150 struct mtop mt_command; 1151 struct mtget mt_status; 1152 mt_command.mt_op = MTBSF; 1153 mt_command.mt_count = 3; 1154 ioctl(fd, MTIOCTOP, &mt_command); 1155 mt_command.mt_op = MTFSF; 1156 mt_command.mt_count = 1; 1157 ioctl(fd, MTIOCTOP, &mt_command); 1158 ioctl(fd, MTIOCGET, (char *)&mt_status); 1159 .Ed 1160 .Pp 1161 or 1162 .Bd -literal -offset 2n 1163 mt_command.mt_op = MTNBSF; 1164 mt_command.mt_count = 2; 1165 ioctl(fd, MTIOCTOP, &mt_command); 1166 ioctl(fd, MTIOCGET, (char *)&mt_status); 1167 .Ed 1168 .Pp 1169 To get information about the tape drive: 1170 .Bd -literal -offset 2n 1171 struct mtdrivetype mtdt; 1172 struct mtdrivetype_request mtreq; 1173 mtreq.size = sizeof(struct mtdrivetype); 1174 mtreq.mtdtp = &mtdt; 1175 ioctl(fd, MTIOCGETDRIVETYPE, &mtreq); 1176 .Ed 1177 .El 1178 .Sh SEE ALSO 1179 .Xr mt 1 , 1180 .Xr tar 1 , 1181 .Xr dd 1M , 1182 .Xr open 2 , 1183 .Xr read 2 , 1184 .Xr write 2 , 1185 .Xr aioread 3C , 1186 .Xr aiowrite 3C , 1187 .Xr ar.h 3HEAD , 1188 .Xr st 7D 1189 .Pp 1190 .%T 1/4 Inch Tape Drive Tutorial