On Tue, 2004-08-03 at 20:14, Yura Pismerov wrote:
> Is there mt on HPUX ?
> Try "mt -f <device> defcompression 1"
> Also check the following document (if not yet):
> http://sony.storagesupport.com/ait/downloads/unix216.pdf
>
There is mt on HPUX, and according to the man page (and me trying it out),
HPUX's mt doesn't know about the defcompression command
But before I got to your post, I think I found the answer. I'll know
for sure when the test backup I'm starting now completes. I'll post
results when I know them (for the benefit of future inquires about the
same problem).
I finally found a document that explained exactly how to make a device
on HPUX that has compression enabled.
You use the mksf (not mkfs) command with the following arguments (as
opposed to simply using the devices that the insf command creates):
mksf -d <driver> -I <instance> -c 3 -n -u
This command is used to create a non-rewinding, Berkeley-style, AIT-3
format, compression-enabled device file. <instance> is replaced with
the instance number that your tape drive is. Usually tape drive #0 is
instance 0, tape drive #1 is instance 1, and so on. The <driver> is
usually "stape". You can see what drivers your tape drives are using on
HPUX by doing
ioscan -f -C tape
Once I did the mksf command, a lssf on the new device shows what I would
expect:
# lssf /dev/rmt/c2t1d0BESTC3nb
stape card instance 2 SCSI target 1 SCSI LUN 0 berkeley no
rewind compression type 3 best density available at address
8/4.1.0 /dev/rmt/c2t1d0BESTC3nb
--
Craig Ruefenacht
UNIX Systems Administrator
USANA Health Sciences
http://www.usana.com
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