[comp.unix.sysv386] Exabyte, Interactive and me.

jgd@rsiatl.UUCP (John G. DeArmond) (09/26/90)

In <LARRY.90Sep13141156@focsys.uucp> larry@focsys.uucp (Larry Williamson) writes:
>I must write > 1 Gigabyte of data to a tape on a 386 system running
>Unix 3.2. It may be either an ISA bus (or EISA bus system if a scsi
>controller is available). I expect to use an Exabyte drive (what else
>would be faster?), an adaptec 1542 controller (for both tape and
>disk).
>What data rate should I expect to be able to maintain for the duration
>of the write?

We have an exabyte drive on a Compaq 386/33 Deskpro using an Adaptec
SCSI controller, a Maxtor 600 drive and ISC release 2.2.  After
my collegue Paul Anderson wrote a set of utilities to condition
the drive and to guarantee correct blocking, thanks to ISC's crappy
exabyte driver (full flame to follow), we see a write rate over
the duration of the backup of between 600 and 700mb/hr.  This
is with all components right out of the box and no kernal tuning.
We get about 400mb/hour backing up other machines over the ethernet
using rsh.

We've found a wide variety of video tapes to be reliable.  IN particular
the Sony P6-120mp metal particle tape ( ~$9.00 ea)appears to be the same 
tape as the  $40.00 "certified" exatape.  One thing to be aware of.
There is a hole in the bottom of the cartridge between the spools but 
forward toward the tape.  The tape drive contains a sensor that looks
for reflective material in this hole.  The certified tapes and the 
Sony plated metal tapes ( ~$14.00 ea) have a reflective foil in this 
hole.  The P6-120 does not.  In some versions of the drive, and
in particular, the one OEM'd by NCR, the lack of this reflective foil
reduces the tape capacity to about 200 mb. Insert some foil and 
you are off. The drive we bought directly from exabyte does not read
this foil.  I suspect that this is a strappable option, though I'm
not sure becasue we did not get a hardware manual with the drive.

The drive seems to be very reliable once one learns how to work with it.
It is NOT like a DC-600-type drive.  Blocking MATTERS.  You MUST
block your data on 1024 byte boundaries.  And you MUST retension
the tape before any opens.  ISC apparently does not supply a utility;
after an extensive RTFM, we wrote our own.  And you MUST NOT attempt
any operation until the green light is on.  If you do, you must
remove the tape and reinsert it (a 45 second operation.)

About the only sour note has to do with Interactive Unix (as usual).
Their driver appears to do little more than format SCSI commands for
the drive.  It appears to have no particular knowledge of the drive
characteristics.  It is in stark contrast to the exabyte driver supplied
by IBM on the RS/6000. (Yeah, so I said something nice about the 
shitstation/6000.  It won't happen again.)  It took us several hours 
to figure out how to make a device for the tape.  kconfig does NOT 
do it and the FM is confusing to a sin, mixing minor number information
freely between QIC and exabyte type drives.  And as usual, a
call to tech support got a "Duuuuuuhhhh".  To the point, we still have 
not figured out how to make a non-rewind device.  

We HAVE figured out how to make a kernal PANIC device. Just make a device, 
we call it /dev/xpanic, with a major number of 41, minor number 12.  
Then open the device and watch the machine panic and reboot!

But once you tiptoe through the turdpatch, you'll find the exabyte 
about as fast a device as any backup unit you might find.

John


-- 
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