sandy@polari.UUCP (sandy fifer) (12/10/90)
I'd like to find out how magneto-optical jukeboxes behave when attached to Unix systems. That is, how do they fit into the Unix filesystem, and how do they look to users? For example, if I want to gain access to a file on a certain cartridge, do I have to use some command to ``load'' the cartridge, and then mount it onto a directory? Or are the cartridges all mounted at the same time, and the driver loads and unloads them appropriately, as I peruse the corresponding directories? Either of these approaches (and probably others) should be possible. What do vendors actually provide? I'm primarily interested in jukebox subsystems, rather than jukeboxes incorporated into turnkey NFS servers. Thanks for any enlightenment you can provide. Sandy Fifer sandy@polari.uucp ...!uw-beaver!sumax!polari!sandy
buck@siswat.UUCP (A. Lester Buck) (12/11/90)
In article <2868@polari.UUCP>, sandy@polari.UUCP (sandy fifer) writes:
< I'd like to find out how magneto-optical jukeboxes behave when attached
< to Unix systems. That is, how do they fit into the Unix filesystem, and
< how do they look to users?
<
< Sandy Fifer sandy@polari.uucp
< ...!uw-beaver!sumax!polari!sandy
HP had a nice paper in a recent (summer 90?) Usenix proceedings on how they
integrated their jukebox into HP-UX.
--
A. Lester Buck buck@siswat.lonestar.org ...!uhnix1!lobster!siswat!buck