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You may encounter the following problems with SCSI tape drives:
For SCSI tape drives, a message similar to the following is displayed at system startup even if the tape drive is not present on the SCSI bus:
%tape - - - type=S ha=0 id=2 lun=0A message similar to the following is displayed when you try to access the tape when there is a problem:
NOTICE: ha: No controller response on SCSI adapter (ha=n id=n lun=n) NOTICE: Stp: Stp_call_oemtab - Inquiry failed on SCSI type n dev minor/n (ha=n id=n lun=n) /dev/rct0: cannot open
To correct the problem:
If the tape drive is internal to the computer, check that it
initializes a tape when you insert one in the drive.
7 for SCSI-1 and 0
15
for a 16-bit Wide SCSI-2,
Ultra-SCSI (SCSI-III), or Ultra2SCSI bus.
tape drives are often configured for ID 2.
7.
After an Upgrade installation, /dev/rct0 might no longer exist. When you try to access a configured SCSI tape drive, you might see the error:
cannot open: /dev/rct0
If the device is correctly configured with mkdev tape, you can access the tape drive using /dev/rStp0.
Do not use dd to put individual data files onto Exabyte 8mm tapes; extracting the files may cause extraneous characters to be appended to the original data. You can, however, use dd with Exabyte 8mm tapes to store and extract tar(C) or cpio(C) archives.
You should wait for a DAT or Exabyte 8mm drive to finish its initialization sequence before attempting to access the device. This may take 30 seconds or more.