The
mtx
command controls single or multi-drive SCSI media changers such as
tape changers, autoloaders, tape libraries, or optical media jukeboxes.
It can also be used with media changers that use the 'ATTACHED' API,
presuming that they properly report the MChanger bit as required
by the SCSI T-10 SMC specification.
OPTIONS
The first argument, given following
-f
, is the SCSI generic device corresponding to your media changer.
Consult your operating system's documentation for more information (for
example, under Linux these are generally /dev/sg0 through /dev/sg15,
under FreeBSD these are /dev/pass0 through /dev/passX,
under SunOS it may be a file under /dev/rdsk).
The 'invert' option will invert (flip) the media (for optical jukeboxes that
allow such) before inserting it into the drive or returning it to the
storage slot.
The 'noattach' option forces the regular media changer API even if the
media changer incorrectly reported that it uses the 'ATTACHED' API.
The 'nobarcode' option forces the loader to not request barcodes even if
the loader is capable of reporting them.
Following these options there may follow
one or more robotics control
commands. Note that the 'invert' and 'noattach'
options apply to ALL of robotics control
commands.
COMMANDS
--version
Report the mtx version number (e.g. mtx 1.2.8) and exit.
inquiry
Report the product type (Medium Changer, Tape Drive, etc.), Vendor ID,
Product ID, Revision, and whether this uses the Attached Changer API
(some tape drives use this rather than reporting a Medium Changer on a
separate LUN or SCSI address).
noattach
Make further commands use the regular media changer API rather than the
_ATTACHED API, no matter what the "Attached" bit said in the Inquiry info.
Needed with some brain-dead changers that report Attached bit but don't respond
to _ATTACHED API.
inventory
Makes the robot arm go and check what elements are in the slots. This
is needed for a few libraries like the Breece Hill ones that do not
automatically check the tape inventory at system startup.
status
Reports how many drives and storage elements are contained in the
device. For each drive, reports whether it has media loaded in it, and
if so, from which storage slot the media originated. For each storage
slot, reports whether it is empty or full, and if the media changer
has a bar code, MIC reader, or some other way of uniquely identifying
media without loading it into a drive, this reports the volume tag
and/or alternate volume tag for each piece of media.
For historical reasons drives are numbered from 0 and storage slots are
numbered from 1.
load <slotnum> [ <drivenum> ]
Load media from slot <slotnum> into drive <drivenum>. Drive 0 is assumed
if the drive number is omitted.
unload [<slotnum>] [ <drivenum> ]
Unloads media from drive <drivenum> into slot <slotnum>. If <drivenum> is
omitted, defaults to drive 0 (as do all commands).
If <slotnum> is omitted, defaults to the slot
that the drive was loaded from. Note that there's currently no way to
say 'unload drive 1's media to the slot it came from', other than to
explicitly use that slot number as the destination.
[eepos <operation>] transfer <slotnum> <slotnum>
Transfers media from one slot to another, assuming that your mechanism is
capable of doing so. Usually used to move media to/from an import/export
port. 'eepos' is used to extend/retract the import/export
tray on certain mid-range to high end tape libraries (if, e.g., the tray was
slot 32, you might say say 'eepos 1 transfer 32 32' to extend the tray).
Valid values for eepos <operation>
are 0 (do nothing to the import/export tray), 1, and 2 (what 1 and 2 do varies
depending upon the library, consult your library's SCSI-level
documentation).
first [<drivenum>]
Loads drive <drivenum> from the first slot in the media changer. Unloads
the drive if there is already media in it. Note that
this command may not be what you want on large tape libraries -- e.g. on Exabyte 220, the first slot is
usually a cleaning tape. If <drivenum> is omitted, defaults to first drive.
last [<drivenum>]
Loads drive <drivenum> from the last slot in the media changer. Unloads
the drive if there is already a tape in it.
next [<drivenum>]
Unloads the drive and loads the next tape in sequence. If the drive was
empty, loads the first tape into the drive.
AUTHORS
The original 'mtx' program was written by Leonard Zubkoff and extensively
revised for large multi-drive libraries with bar code readers
by Eric Lee Green <[email protected]>, to whom all problems should
be reported for this revision. See 'mtx.c' for other contributors.
BUGS AND LIMITATIONS
You may need to do a 'mt offline' on the tape drive to eject the tape
before you can issue the 'mtx unload' command. The Exabyte EZ-17 and 220
in particular will happily sit there snapping the robot arm's claws around
thin air trying to grab a tape that's not there.
For some Linux distributions, you may need to re-compile the kernel to
scan SCSI LUN's in order to detect the media changer. Check /proc/scsi/scsi
to see what's going on.
If you try to unload a tape to its 'source' slot, and said slot is
full, it will instead put the tape into the first empty
slot. Unfortunately the list of empty slots is not updated between
commands on the command line, so if you try to unload another drive to
a full 'source' slot during the same invocation of 'mtx', it will try
to unload to the same (no longer empty) slot and will urp with a SCSI
error.
This program reads the Mode Sense Element Address Assignment Page
(SCSI) and requests data on all available elements. For larger
libraries (more than a couple dozen elements)
this sets a big Allocation_Size in the SCSI command block for the
REQUEST_ELEMENT_STATUS command in order to be able to read the entire
result of a big tape library. Some operating systems may not be able
to handle this. Versions of Linux earlier than 2.2.6, in particular,
may fail this request due to inability to find contiguous pages of
memory for the SCSI transfer (later versions of Linux 'sg' device do
scatter-gather so that this should no longer be a problem).
The
eepos
command remains in effect for all further commands on a command
line. Thus you might want to follow
eepos 1 transfer 32 32
with
eepos 0
as
the next command (which clears the
eepos
bits).
Need a better name for 'eepos' command! ('eepos' is the name of the bit
field in the actual low-level SCSI command, and has nothing to do with what
it does).
This program has only been tested on Linux with a limited number of
tape loaders (a dual-drive Exabyte 220 tape library, with bar-code
reader and 21 slots, an Exabyte EZ-17 7-slot autoloader, and a Seagate
DDS-4 autochanger with 6 slots). It may not work on other operating systems
with larger libraries,
due to the big SCSI request size.
Report problems to Eric Lee Green <[email protected]>.
HINTS
Under Linux,
cat /proc/scsi/scsi
will tell you what SCSI devices you have.
You can then refer to them as
/dev/sga,/dev/sgb,
etc. by the order they
are reported.
Under FreeBSD,
camcontrol devlist
will tell you what SCSI devices you
have, along with which
pass
device controls them.
Under Solaris, set up your 'sgen' driver so that it'll look for
tape changers (see /kernel/drv/sgen.conf and the sgen man page), type
touch /reconfigure
then reboot. You can find your changer in /devices by typing
/usr/sbin/devfsadm -C
to clean out no-longer-extant entries in your /devices directory, then
find /devices -name hanger -print
to find the device name. Set the symbolic link
/dev/changer
to point
to that device name (if it is not doing so already).
With BRU, set your mount and unmount commands as described on the EST
web site at http://www.estinc.com to move to the next tape when backing up
or restoring. With GNU
tar,
see
mtx.doc
for an example of how to use
tar
and
mtx
to make multi-tape backups.