rogerk@sco.COM (Roger Knopf 5502) (05/09/90)
In article <936@s6.Morgan.COM> amull@Morgan.COM (Andrew P. Mullhaupt) writes: >I have installed a Mountain Filesafe TD4000 'floppy' tape drive >(it uses DC2000 cartridges) in a dual boot DOS/UNIX system. It >works fine in DOS, but I can't get UNIX to do anything with it. The Mountain 4000 comes without a drive select jumper. Their DOS software does drive select without the jumper. Under SCO Unix or Xenix you have to put a jumper on. Sorry, but I don't know how to do it if it is not described in Mountain's literature I know they have a tech support line which can describe this to you. Roger Knopf SCO Consulting Services -- "His potential clients were always giving him the business." --Robert Thornton
goer@sophist.uucp (Richard Goerwitz) (05/09/90)
In article <5434@scorn.sco.COM> rogerk@sco.COM (Roger Knopf 5502) writes: > >In article <936@s6.Morgan.COM> amull@Morgan.COM (Andrew P. Mullhaupt) writes: >>I have installed a Mountain Filesafe TD4000 'floppy' tape drive >>(it uses DC2000 cartridges) in a dual boot DOS/UNIX system. It >>works fine in DOS, but I can't get UNIX to do anything with it. > >The Mountain 4000 comes without a drive select jumper. Their DOS >software does drive select without the jumper. Under SCO Unix or >Xenix you have to put a jumper on. Sorry, but I don't know how to >do it if it is not described in Mountain's literature I know they >have a tech support line which can describe this to you. Here's the deal. The DOS drivers put out by Mountain use a software switch which allows the TD4000 to be daisy-chained off the B floppy. Under Xenix, this won't work. You can't have both the drive and the floppy. Also, you have to pull your case off, and put a jumper on the back of the drive. This is no big deal. I think I even have some directions around for how to do it. I'll email them to you if you need them. Mountain can also give you directions, but you have to make sure you talk to one of the support people who knows Xenix. One of the things SCO is still doing for Xenix is working on drivers for peripherals like this. The last release of sls118e or whatever it is (for tape drives of this sort) allows you to use a MTN drive, but only under the circumstances outlined above. Perhaps a newer revision exists now on sosco that works more like the DOS drivers. I dunno. Last I checked was a couple of months ago. -Richard L. Goerwitz goer%sophist@uchicago.bitnet goer@sophist.uchicago.edu rutgers!oddjob!gide!sophist!goer