Ftape-HOWTO
 Claus-Justus Heine, <[email protected]>
 v3.0, August 1998

 This HOWTO discusses essential do's and dont's for the ftape floppy
 tape driver under Linux. It focusses on the newest version which is
 ftape-4.02 at the time of this writing. This HOWTO is to be intended
 as first step help and source of information.  The ftape driver inter-
 faces to QIC-40, QIC-80, QIC-3010 and QIC-3020 compatible drives, and
 to the Iomega Ditto 2GB and Ditto Max drives.  The QIC-3010 and
 QIC-3020 standards are also known as `Travan' (TR-2 and TR-3).  These
 drives connect via the floppy disk controller (FDC) which may be
 either an internal FDC or inside of certain parallel port floppy tape
 drives. Please refer to the section ``Supported drives'' for further
 information.  ftape does not cover SCSI or QIC-02 tape drives.  DAT
 tape drives usually (always?) connect to a SCSI controller.  This is
 but one of the Linux HOWTO documents.  You can get an index of the
 HOWTOs from the Linux HOWTO index, while the real HOWTO's can be
 fetched (using ftp) from sunsite.unc.edu:pub/Linux/doc/HOWTO (this is
 the ``official'' place) or via the World Wide Web from the Linux Docu-
 mentation Project home page.
 ______________________________________________________________________

 Table of Contents



 1. Legalese

 2. Revision History

 3. The preliminaries

    3.1 Other sources of information
    3.2 Contacts
    3.3 What is

 4. Getting and installing

    4.1 Getting
    4.2 Differences between
    4.3 Installing the driver with v2.0.x and earlier kernels
    4.4 Installing the driver with v2.1.x and later kernels
    4.5 Following the development of the
    4.6 Mixing

 5. The Care and Feeding of Tape and Tape Drives

    5.1 Formatting
       5.1.1 Can I format my tapes under Linux?
       5.1.2 Which formatting programs can I use under DOS?
    5.2 Retensioning
    5.3 Drive Cleaning
    5.4 Repairing de-spooled cartridges

 6. Hardware support

    6.1 Supported tape drives
    6.2 Supported special controllers
       6.2.1 Colorado FC-10, FC-20
       6.2.2 Mountain MACH-2
       6.2.3 Iomega Tape Accelerator II
       6.2.4 Iomega Ditto Dash and other 2Mbps controllers
       6.2.5 Iomega Ditto EZ PnP controller
    6.3 Unsupported tape drives
    6.4 Using an external tape drive with
    6.5 PCI motherboards and

 7. Backing up and restoring data

    7.1 Writing an archive to a tape
    7.2 Restoring an archive
    7.3 Testing the archive
    7.4 Putting more than one backup on a tape
    7.5 Appending files to an archive
    7.6 Mount/unmounting tapes

 8. Creating an emergency boot floppy for

 9. Frequently Asked Questions

 10. FAQ: "Compiling and installing Ftape" related questions !

    10.1 What Ftape version should I use?
    10.2 I'm having problems getting my XYZ drive to run under the 2.0.xx kernel with the built-in driver.  How do I fix this?
    10.3 I'm running Linux/SMP and the system just freezes when trying to access the Ftape devices!
    10.4 Why does depmod complain about "undefined symbols"?
    10.5 "insmod" says the kernel version is wrong
    10.6 "insmod" says that kernel 1.2.0 and 1.2.0 differ
    10.7 Trying to compile Ftape gives me the error "modversions.h: no such file or directory"
    10.8 What is this versioned symbols stuff anyway?
    10.9 I seem to be getting sftape instead of zftape. When I run "ftmt status" command, I get output that the Ftape docs says corresponds to sftape ( /dev/qft0: Invalid argument ). Why?
    10.10 My Ditto DASH/FC-20/Exabyte Accelerator card works under Microsoft Windows, but I get a drive not found type of error in /var/log/messages when trying to use it under Linux.
    10.11 Ftape DMA transfers gives ECC errors
    10.12 Help! I'm getting 'dmaalloc() failed' in my syslog file.
    10.13 Syslogd works overtime when running Ftape
    10.14 How do I change the trace-level?
    10.15 I'm having problems with Ftape.  I'm using the latest version of Ftape from the Ftape Home Page and believe that I've located a real bug. What should I do?

 11. FAQ: "Using Ftape" related questions !

    11.1 How fast is Ftape ?
    11.2 When I write to some of my tapes, they seem to spend a lot of time "shoe-shining," or repositioning instead of streaming.  Is something wrong with my system?
    11.3 Do I have to reboot to the DOS world to format tapes?
    11.4 Is it possibly to format Ditto 2GB tapes with ftape?
    11.5 Is it possibly to format Ditto Max or Max Pro tapes with ftape?
    11.6 Ftape detects more bad sectors than DOS on QIC-3020 tapes
    11.7 Is it ok that I'm not hearing the tape move when I do a fsf or a bsf with mt?
    11.8 Why does my XYZ backup program complain about "Invalid argument" errors?
    11.9 I/O errors and FDC - some explanations.
    11.10 Why do I get "/dev/qft0: No such device" errors?
    11.11 I get "device busy" when I make multiple backups on a tape using some script.
    11.12 How do I "..." with tar?
    11.13 What block-size should I use with tar ?
    11.14 Where can I find the tar/mt/cpio/dd binaries - sources - manpages?
    11.15 If I use tapers compression, is it a bad idea to use the compression with zftape, or would it be better to not use tapers compression, and let zftape do it?
    11.16 How does zftape compression compare to say gzip -9?
    11.17 I don't trust compression, but hear that the sftape interface is going away. What should I do?
    11.18 Ftape says "This tape has no 'Linux raw format"
    11.19 Can I exchange tapes with someone using DOS?
    11.20 How does `mt eom' work when you've started overwriting a tape in the middle?
    11.21 When I made backups before using taper, under the 2.0.29 ftape my drive didn't support fsf, under the new zftape it does, why would this be, and what exactly is fsf ?
    11.22 What exactly is the difference between ftape, and zftape?
    11.23 What is the difference between a rewinding, and non rewinding drive?
    11.24 Can someone tell me how to use mt to rewind my TR-3 drive one record using zftape record, so I can verify it?
    11.25 By non-rewinding, they mean that it doesn't automatically rewind, correct? It doesn't mean that under no circumstances it will rewind, right?  I tried using /dev/zqft0, and it instantly rewinds the tape.
    11.26 What is the difference between what mt considers a record and what it considers a file?
    11.27 Reusing tapes with zftape without reformatting the tape.
    11.28 This script implements a simple contents listing for the zftape package using the "MTIOCVOLINFO" ioctl.

 12. FAQ: "Tape and Drivers" related questions !

    12.1 What are good makers of Travan tapes?
    12.2 Where can I obtain the QIC standards?
    12.3 Is the Iomega Ditto 2GB drive supported?
    12.4 Is the Iomega Ditto Max drive supported?
    12.5 Is the Iomega Ditto Max Pro drive supported?

 13. FAQ: Miscellaneous !

    13.1 How to subscribe to the Ftape Mailing List?
    13.2 How to un-subscribe from the Ftape Mailing List?
    13.3 Links to related information.

 14. Debugging the

    14.1 The kernel/
    14.2 OK, it's a bug ...ehhh... feature - How do I submit a report?

 15. Contributions



 ______________________________________________________________________

 1.  Legalese



 The Linux ftape-HOWTO may be reproduced and distributed in whole or in
 part, subject to the following conditions:



      Copyright (c) 1993-1996 by Kai Harrekilde-Petersen
      Email: [email protected]

      Copyright (c) 1996-1997 by Kevin Johnson
      Email: [email protected]

      Copyright (c) 1998 by Claus-Justus Heine
      Email: [email protected]



 The Linux ftape-HOWTO is a free document; you may reproduce and/or
 modify it under the terms of version 2 (or, at your option, any later
 version) of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free
 Software Foundation.

 This HOWTO is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but
 WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
 MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.  See the GNU
 General Public License for more details.

 The author encourages wide distribution of this document for personal
 or commercial use, provided that the above copyright notice remains
 intact and the provisions of the GNU General Public License are
 adhered to.  The summary is that you may copy and distribute this
 document free of charge, or for a profit.  No explicit permission is
 required from the author for reproduction of this document in any
 medium, physical or electronic.

 Note that derivative works and translations of this document must be
 placed under the GNU General Public License, and the original
 copyright notice must remain intact.  If you have contributed new
 material to this document, you must make the source code (e.g., SGML
 source) available for your revisions.  Please make revisions and
 updates available directly to the author: Contact [email protected]
 aachen.de via Internet e-mail.  This will allow the author to merge
 updates and provide consistent revisions to the Linux community.

 The author encourages distributors of Linux software in any medium to
 use the HOWTO as an installation and user guide.  Given the copyright
 above, you are free to print and distribute copies of this document
 with your software.  If doing so, you may wish to include a short
 ``installation supplement'' for your release, or modify the relevant
 sections of this book to reflect your product.

 The author would like to know of any plans to publish and distribute
 this HOWTO commercially.  In this way, we can ensure that you are kept
 up-to-date with new revisions.  And, should a new version be right
 around the corner, you might wish to delay your publication of the
 HOWTO until it is available.

 If you are distributing this HOWTO commercially, donations, royalties,
 and/or printed copies are greatly appreciated by the author.
 Contributing in this way shows your support for free software and the
 Linux Documentation Project.

 If you have questions or comments, please contact the author at

 [email protected]

 2.  Revision History



    version 3.0 (August, 1998)

    o  Additions to list of supported hardware.

    o  New section about differences between ftape versions.

    o  Pointers to the Ftape-FAQ and the Ftape manual.

    o  Updated to ftape-4.02.

    o  Additions to the FAQ.

    o  Update all URLs.

    version 2.0 (March 15, 1997)

    o  Updated to ftape v2.11 and v3.xx

    o  Lots of updates.

    version 1.9 (September 20, 1996)

    o  New maintainers of ftape and the HOWTO.

    o  A few minor formatting and spelling fixes.

    o  Updated for Linux v2.0.

    o  Started to integrate some of Andrew Martin's ftape info.


    version 1.8 (May 22, 1996)

    o  Copyright policy changed to GNU GPL v2

    o  The maintainer's email address has changed.

    o  Updated to ftape-2.08

    o  ftape is now a part of the kernel distribution.

    version 1.7.1 (February 13, 1996)

    o  Updated to ftape-2.06b

    version 1.7 (January 28, 1996)

    o  Updated to ftape-2.06 and modules-1.3.57

    version 1.6.2 (January 23, 1996)

    o  Connor TST3200R drive added

    o  Updated 2Mbps fdc information.

    version 1.6.1 (January 16, 1996)

    o  minor corrections

    version 1.6 (January 10, 1996)


    o  New maintainer of ftape

    o  updated to v2.05

    o  added new drives



 3.  The preliminaries



 3.1.  Other sources of information



    ftape version 3
       ftape-3.x came with a manual of its own, which is contained in
       the ftape-3.04d package available from the usual places.  See
       ``Getting Ftape''.


    ftape version 4
       ftape-4.x also has a documentation package ftape-doc which is
       available from the usual places. This Ftape-HOWTO, however, also
       focusses on ftape-4.x and is meant as an entry point to the
       available documentation. See ``Getting Ftape''.


    ftape-tools
       The ftape-tools package (including useful utilities for ftape)
       comes with its own manual.  See ``Getting Ftape''.


    Ftape-FAQ
       The Ftape-FAQ is included wordly in this manual, but more recent
       versions may be found at http://www.correct.nl/~ftape.



 3.2.  Contacts


 The maintainer of the source for ftape is Claus Heine
 <[email protected]>.  He has a web page at http://www-
 math.math.rwth-aachen.de/~LBFM/claus/ftape/.

 If you have a problem or questions about ftape, try posting to the
 Linux Tape mailing list [email protected] (see ``Following
 the ftape development'' below).  There also used to be a newsgroup
 that mirrored the mailing list traffic but it has vanished some time
 ago.

 I use ftape (it is my sole means of backing up on my linux box :-).  I
 hesitate to make recommendations on what hardware to buy.  See the
 section ``Supported drives'' and ``Unsupported drives'' for a list of
 supported and unsupported drives.

 You should try to post a summary of your problems and its solution(s),
 after you've got it working, even if you only got it partially
 working. Please also send a copy copy of your solution to the Linux
 Tape mailing list at <[email protected]> so that it can be
 added to the HOWTO and/or the FAQ.

 If you receive this as part of a printed distribution or on a CD-ROM,
 please check out the Linux Documentation home page or ftp to
 ftp://sunsite.unc.edu:/pub/Linux/doc/HOWTO to see if there exists a
 more recent version.  This could potentially save you a lot of
 trouble.

 If you email me, please include the string ftape in the subject line.
 This will help ensure the mail doesn't inadvertently get buried. But
 preferrably you should email to the Linux Tape mailing list at <linux-
 [email protected]> instead of contacting me directly.



 3.3.  What is ftape


 ftape is a driver program that controls various low-cost tape drives
 that connect to the floppy controller.

 ftape is not a backup program as such; it is a device driver, which
 allows you to use the tape drive (just like the SoundBlaster 16 driver
 let you use your sound card) through the device files
 /dev/[n]qft[0-3].

 ftape was originally written by Bas Laarhoven <[email protected]>, with ``a
 little help from his friends'' to sort out the ECC (Error Correcting
 Code) stuff. ftape is copyrighted by Bas under the GNU General Public
 License, which basically says: ``go ahead and share this with the
 world, just don't disallow other people from copying it further''.

 ftape has undergone several changes since then. While the Linux-2.0.x
 kernel series still contains ftape-2.08 the v2.1.x and soon the v2.2.*
 kernel series come with ftape-3.x (hopefully even with ftape-4.02, but
 this wasn't clear at the time of this writing) which differs in some
 points from the ftape-2.x driver.  Since version 3.00 the ftape driver
 has been maintained by me (Claus-Justus Heine); it has been changed
 and improved in several respects and support for new hardware has been
 added.

 ftape is quite stable, and has been that for some time now.  It is
 reliable enough for critical backups (but it's always a good idea to
 check your backups, so you won't get a nasty surprise some day).

 ftape supports drives that conform to the QIC-117 and one of the
 QIC-80, QIC-40, QIC-3010, and QIC-3020 standards as well as the Iomega
 Ditto 2GB and Ditto Max drives which no longer strictly conform to the
 QIC standards in all respects.

 ftape can drive floppy tape drives that connect to the internal FDC as
 well as certain parallel port floppy tape drives.

 ftape supports neither QIC-02, IDE (ATAPI), nor SCSI tape drives.
 SCSI drives are accessed as /dev/[n]st[0-7] and are supported by the
 kernel through the SCSI drivers.  If you look for help on SCSI tape
 drives, you should read the SCSI-howto.  ATAPI tape drives are
 supported by the kernel since 1.3.46.  See section ``Supported
 drives'' and ``Unsupported drives'' for a list of supported and
 unsupported drives.



 4.  Getting and installing ftape



 4.1.  Getting ftape


 The v2.0.x versions of the kernel include version 2.08 of ftape I
 recommend, however, that you grab the latest version of the full
 source code package for ftape. It is a newer version, includes files
 that are not included in the kernel v2.0.X distribution, and includes
 much better documentation about how to install ftape.  The v2.1.x and
 later versions of the kernel include the version 3.04 of ftape.


 I recommend that you download the latest stable version of ftape which
 is 4.02 at the time of this writing and is available from

 http://www-math.math.rwth-aachen.de/~LBFM/claus/ftape/archives.html

 as well as from

 ftp://sunsite.unc.edu/pub/Linux/kernel/tapes/.

 You probably should also grab the ftape-doc and the ftape-tools
 package that are available from the same locations.

 If you still want to use the ftape-2.08 which is shipped with the
 v2.0.x kernels, then you get a version of the driver which is really
 out of date and doesn't support QIC-3020 tapes at 2Mbps correctly,
 neither does it support the Ditto 2GB drives nor the Ditto Max drives
 nor any kind of parallel port tape drive. The section ``Supported
 drives'' gives detailed information about which version of the ftape
 driver supports which hardware.


 4.2.  Differences between ftape-2.x , ftape-3.x  and ftape-4.x  ver-
 sions


 ftape-3.x and ftape-4.x use the file system interface that was
 implemented for a branch release which was called zftape. Actually,
 the module that implements the VFS (Virtual File System) interface of
 ftape-3.x and ftape-4.x still is called zftape.o and its C-sources
 inside the kernel tree reside in
 [/usr/src/linux/]drivers/char/ftape/zftape/.

 ftape-2.x (i.e. the version still contained in the v2.0.x kernel) uses
 another file system interface, that was implemented by ftape's
 original author Bas Larhoven.


    File Marks
       The conceptional difference between ftape-2.x and later versions
       of ftape is the way file marks are implemented.

       Floppy tape devices don't have real file marks. (--  File marks
       are used to distinguish different backup sets if you write
       multiple backup sets to a tape. SCSI and QIC-150 tapes have real
       file marks, i.e. between two different backup sets there is a
       region on the tape that is written special data to so that the
       drive logic can detect that marker when the tape is wound with
       (possibly) high speed over those file marks.--) Because the goal
       of ftape's file system interface was from the beginning on to
       provide an interface that could be used with standard Unix-like
       tape utilities (i.e. mt) the developers of ftape started to
       emulate file marks by storing the positions on the tape where a
       file mark should be located in certain fields of the header
       segments. (-- header segments refers to a region at the
       beginning of the tape sized two times 29k to hold some important
       information about the tape format and size and some status
       information.--)

       However, the QIC standards already designate a special region to
       store such information in, the so called volume table segment.
       Since ftape-3.x this volume table segment is used instead of
       using unused data fields in the header segment. As a result it
       is possible to use your tape cartridge with different operating
       systems in the sense that your Win or DOS backup program will
       realize that certain regions of the tape cartridge are already
       occupied with data, and ftape-3.x and later will detect the
       regions used by those DOS and Win programs. However, you can't
       extract a DOS backup set under Linux or extract a volume written
       by ftape under DOS, safe you write your own software to do that.


    IOCTL interface
       There are certain differences in the IOCTL (-- This IO control
       interface is used by e.g. mt to rewind the tape or skip to the
       next file mark or do any other tape operation.--)

       interface between ftape-2.x and ftape-3.x and later. A detailed
       description can be found in the ftape-manual contained in the
       ftape-doc package.  See ``Getting Ftape''.


    Formatting
       Formatting of cartridges is supported with ftape-3.x and later
       only. Please get the ftape-tools package that contains the
       ftformat program that interfaces to the driver to format
       cartridges.  See ``Getting Ftape''. The ftape-tools package
       comes with (more or less) detailed documentation, so the case of
       formatting cartridges is not dealt with in this document.


    Compression
       ftape-3.x supported user transparent on-the-fly compression in
       software. This feature (or bug) has vanished in ftape-4.x as it
       made further improvements concerning the realiability of backups
       very very hard. This means, ftape-4.x comes without compression
       support.

       However de-compression of compressed archives produced with
       ftape-3.x is supported in order not to brake existing backup
       programs where a user-level filter would not suffice to preserve
       compatibility. Think, e.g., of taper which calls the MTIOC
       ioctls itself instead of relying on the mt program to perform
       tape operations.


 The ftape-manual contained in the ftape-doc package contains much more
 detailed information about ftape`s file system interface as well as
 implementation notes which by far exceed the scope of this HOWTO. See
 ``Getting Ftape'' for informations about where to obtain the manual.



 4.3.  Installing the driver with v2.0.x and earlier kernels


 The following section provides some useful information to get you
 going with the installation of v4.x which is not shipped with the
 kernel source tree yet but has to be downloaded separately, see the
 section ``Getting ftape'' above.

 Once you've downloaded the source code (probably ftape-4.02-tar.gz),
 untar it.  You can do this by determining what directory you want the
 source code to be located in.  I recommend /usr/src/ or ~/src.  When
 the tar file is extracted, it will dump everything into a ftape-4.02
 subdirectory, so that you'll end up, in the example I've given, with
 something like /usr/src/ftape-4.02 or ~/src/ftape-4.02.

 NOTE: you cannot compile ftape-4.02 into your v2.0.x kernel. Instead,
 configure your kernel to not compile the ftape driver and follow the
 installation instructions in the ftape-4.02 distribution and install
 ftape-4.02 as a module.

 Read the README file.  The README is required reading.  It's the top
 of the tree, so to speak.  If there are specific files that the README
 tells you to read then read them.  It will make the process much less
 complicated.

 Do NOT proceed with compiling the package until you have read the
 appropriate README files and the INSTALL file.

 Afterwards you need to edit the MCONFIG file and configure you package
 according to your hardware. The MCONFIG file contains lots of
 explanations so it should be fairly easy to go along with it.

 However, most of the hardware configuration can be done via setting
 parameters during module load time so most parameters specified in the
 file MCONFIG simply give the default configuration, but you don't need
 to recompile the driver to change IO addresses or interrupt settings.
 The file INSTALL and the file modules/insert contain examples how to
 specify the proper module parameters when loading the kernel modules,
 so I won't go into further detail here.

 If you are using a Linux-v1.3.x kernel, you should consider moving to
 v2.0.x.  v1.3.x was the development release prior to the production
 release v2.0.x.



 4.4.  Installing the driver with v2.1.x and later kernels


 (* Maybe ftape-4.02 will be included into the v2.2.x kernel, but this
 isn't clear at the time of this writing. This HOWTO will be revised
 appropriately when this has become clear. So long you have to refer to
 the previous section ``Installing the driver with v2.0.x and earlier
 kernels'' and disregard the contents of this section.  *)


 The Linux kernel v2.1.x and later already include ftape-4.x so you
 don't need to download the ftape-4.x kernel driver package.

 ftape-4.x as included in the v2.1.x versions of the kernel can be
 completely configured using the kernel configuration menus (either
 with make menuconfig or make xconfig. Also, there is online help
 available that documents each parameter setting which I won't repeat
 here.

 The various boot- and loadtime parameter settings are explained in the
 file

 [/usr/src/linux/]Documentation/ftape.txt

 of the Linux-v2.1.x and later kernel distributions.



 4.5.  Following the development of the ftape  driver


 If you want to follow the development of the ftape driver, you should
 subscribe to the Linux Tape mailing list [email protected].
 To do so you need to send an email saying `subscribe linux-tape' (in
 the body) to [email protected].  When you subscribe, you will
 be sent a greeting mail, which will tell you how to submit real mails
 and how to get off the list again. Store this email in a safe place.
 Please.

 Please note that I do not, repeat DO NOT, have any special powers with
 regard to this mailing list.  If you're stuck on the list, don't
 bother to tell me that.  I can only shrug and send you my sympathy
 (but that won't get you off the list).



 4.6.  Mixing ftape  and floppies


 If you use your floppy tape drive with the standard FDC then the
 floppy drive and the floppy tape drive cannot run concurrently as they
 share the same hardware, the FDC, and the floppy and the ftape driver
 do not talk to each other.  Thus, if you have mounted a floppy and
 then try to access the tape drive, ftape will complain that it cannot
 grab IRQ6 and then die.  This is especially a problem when designing a
 emergency disk for use with ftape.  This solution is to either load
 the boot/root disk into a ramdisk and then unmount the floppy, or have
 two floppy drive controllers.



 5.  The Care and Feeding of Tape and Tape Drives



 5.1.  Formatting


 Before a tape can be used, it must be formatted.  The formatting
 process lays out sector information onto the tape.  Other tape
 interfaces don't typically require formatting.  The reason floppy
 tapes do is that they need to look like a floppy (kinda gross, but
 what the hey - it works :-).



 5.1.1.  Can I format my tapes under Linux?


 Yes, you can, if you use ftape-3.04d or above. To format a floppy tape
 cartridge you need a user level tool called ftformat as well which is
 contained in the ftape-tools distribution (see section ``Getting
 ftape'').

 The ftape-tools package comes with its own manual, so I do not need to
 repeat here how to use ftformat.


 5.1.2.  Which formatting programs can I use under DOS?



 The following are known to work:


 o  Colorado Memory System's software (tape.exe)

 o  Conner Backup Basics v1.1 and all Windows versions

 o  Norton Backup

 o  QICstream version 2

 o  Tallgrass FileSecure v1.52

 o  Escom Powerstream 3.0 (qs3.exe -- QICstream v3?)

 These programs are known to be more or less buggy:


 o  Conner Backup Basics 1.0

 o  Colorado Windows tape program

 o  CP Backup (wastes tape space, but is OK apart from that)

 As a general rule, most software under DOS should work.  The Conner
 Backup Basics v1.0 has a parameter off by one (someone could not read
 the QIC-80 specs right!), which is corrected in version 1.1.  However,
 ftape detects this, and will work around it.  Dennis T. Flaherty
 (<[email protected]>) report that Conner C250MQ owners can
 obtain the new v1.1, by calling Conner at 1-800-4Conner (in the US)
 and ask for an upgrade (for a nominal fee for the floppy).  The
 Windows versions should work fine.  Some versions of Colorado's tape
 program for windows, has an off-by-one error in the number of
 segments. ftape also detect and work around that bug.

 Central Point Backup can be used, but it wastes precious tape space
 when it encounters a bad spot on the tape.

 NOTE: If you are running a formatting software under DOS, which is not
 mentioned here, please mail the relevant info to me
 (<[email protected]>), so I can update the list.



 5.2.  Retensioning


 QIC tapes are particularly sensitive to tape stretch.  The reason is
 that floppy tapes are pre-formatted with sector information, whereas
 other tape types have their sync information written as the data is
 written to the tape.  If the floppy tape stretches and the sync fields
 get out of sync the result will be read errors.  The problem is worse
 with longer tapes.

 It is a good idea to retension new tapes a few times before using them
 and before formatting them.  You should also try retensioning the tape
 if you are start getting read errors.  It might also be a good idea
 retension the tape before a backup.


 5.3.  Drive Cleaning


 The coating on the tape is an oxide compound.  As the tape is dragged
 across the tape head it has a tendency to leave tiny amounts of
 residue on the head.  You should periodically use a tape cleaner -
 following the specs for the drive in question.  Tape cleaners should
 be available from any distributer of tapes.

 One more additional note about tape cleaning.  You might want to clean
 the drive after the first use of a brand new tape.  A brand new tape
 will typically leave quite a bit of residue the first time it's used.

 Thanks to Neal Friedman for the explanation and suggestion that this
 information be included in the HOWTO.


 5.4.  Repairing de-spooled cartridges


 In rare occasions it can happen that the tape drive doesn't detect the
 EOT (End Of Tape) markers correctly. These markers are simply holes in
 the tape which are detected by the tape drive with means of a little
 photo-transistor (or the like).

 The manual of your tape drive will probably give you proper hints how
 to clean those EOT detectors.

 However, if the EOT detection fails, then the tape drive despooles the
 cartridge because the tape isn't glued to the wheels, but hold by
 friction only.

 There are detailed instructions how to fix such a despooled tape at
 the Iomega WWW pages at

 http://www.iomega.com/support/techs/ditto/3006.html

 and at the Hewlett Packard WWW pages at

 http://www.hp.com/isgsupport/cms/docs/lpg12020.html

 If the pages shouldn't be in the exact locations as given above, then
 please try to browse a little bit through the web pages of HP or
 Iomega until you find the needed information.



 6.  Hardware support



 6.1.  Supported tape drives


 All drives that are both QIC-117 compatible and one of the QIC-40, 80,
 3010, and 3020 standards should work.  QIC-WIDE and Travan drives are
 also supported (TR-1 is just QIC-80 with 8mm tapes, while TR-2 and
 TR-3 is a.k.a QIC-3010 and 3020 respectively). Iomega Ditto 2GB and
 Ditto Max drives are supported, too, though they no longer conform to
 the QIC standards in every respect. Some parallel port tape drives are
 supported as well.

 Some of the comments given below about possible problems with certain
 tape drives are very old, and I don't have access to all of the
 hardware, so I couldn't check everything.

 Some of the reports below have been commented by me
 (<[email protected]>) like this:


      This is a comment.

 Currently, the list of drives that are known to work with ftape is:


    Alloy Retriever 250


    Archive 5580i, XL9250i


    Colorado DJ-10, DJ-20 (aka: Jumbo 120, Jumbo 250)


    Colorado 1400
       <[email protected]> reported a problem doing a 1G
       backup using taper.


    Colorado Trakker parallel port tape drive

       Support added by Jochen Hoenicke
       <[email protected]>.


    HP Colorado T1000

         The problem reports are probably totally out-dated. In
         particular, the zftape the people talk about doesn't
         exist any more, and the ftape driver is the very
         ftape-2.08.


    Works with 3M Travan 400M (TR-1) tapes with 120M tapes.  Also
    reported that mt dies, but with backups using tar it works ok.
    With cpio, ftape is recommended rather than zftape.
    (<[email protected]>)

    Problems have been reported with the drive continually stopping and
    starting with zftape (<[email protected]>).  This appears
    to be a problem with the tape going too fast for the computer; the
    DMA buffers are getting flushed before getting filled again.  Newer
    versions of zftape don't do this any more is a suitably fast backup
    program or large DMA buffers are used
    (<[email protected]>).


    Conner C250MQ(T)
       The 250Q is reported to generate write error and frequent
       repositioning. (Frank Stuess at Nacamar Data Communications)


         Write errors need not be caused by the tape drive, but
         also by bad tape cartridges. Frequent repositioning can
         be caused by bad cartridges, too, but can also be caused
         by overrun errors which would indicate that the FDC and
         DMA controller have problems to talk to each other.



    Conner TSM420R, TSM850R
       The 400 and 800 models only work with TR-1 tapes.


         I don't know whether it was meant that named drives
         doesn't work with ordinary 120MB DC-2120 cartridges, or
         that TR-3 tapes can't be read. The tape drives weren't
         designed for the latter. So what.
    Conner TST3200R
       Works with TR-3 tapes at 1Mbps (ie. 1600M capacity only).  Wirks
       with QIC-WIDE 400M tapes (Sony 5122's?)  (<[email protected]>).
       Works with TR3, QIC-3010, and QIC-3020 tapes.  Comes with a 2MB
       FDC which the Promise 2300+ 1Mbps controller works
       (<[email protected]>).

       Reported that the floppy disk can no longer read low-density
       floppies.  May have to fiddle with IRQ/ports/dma channels
       (<[email protected]>).


         The TST3200R works well with ftape.



    Conner TST800R
       The TST800R works with TR-1, Sony QW5122F (210M) and DC2120
       tapes.


         Works well with ftape since ftape-2.07 at least. Used it
         myself until the drive died with a melted transistor.
         Probably caused by over-heating it previously.



    Conner CTT3200

       The CTT3200 is supposedly identical to the Iomega Ditto 3200.
       It works with the supplied 2Mbps controller, but reported not to
       work under DOS on some machines. (<[email protected]>)


    Conner 1.7G Tapestor (TSM1700R)

       Works with QIC-WIDE tapes (<[email protected]>).  Partially
       works with QIS-3200.  Using the HSC-2 controller, the DMA
       channel needs to be changed (incremented by 1, channel2?, Modify
       the Makefile).  You then need to modify the ftape Makefile to
       reflect this change.  However, ftape seems to be a bit flaky
       with this (no version number supplied) (<[email protected]>).  It
       may not work at 2Mbps (QIC-3020) with the HSC controller.  The
       tape died with a messages like "dumb tape stop" and has since
       been unreliable (<[email protected]>).


         No recent informations available



    Escom or Archive (Hornet) 31250Q


    Exabyte EXB-1500
       Work with QIC-3010 tapes.


    Exabyte TR-3

    Irwin 80SX, Insight 80Mb


    Iomega 250


    Iomega Ditto Tape Insider 420, 1700


    Iomega Ditto Tape Insider 3200
       This is the unit, that I use.  The default jumper settings don't
       work.  Leave the irq and ioport address at the default (6 and
       0x370, respectfully), but change the DMA from 3 to 2. (Kevin
       Johnson <[email protected]>).


         Refer to the file MCONFIG of recent ftape distributions
         for other suggestions for ioport, irq and DMA channel.


    May require the having {0x08882, 80, wake_up_colorado, "Iomega
    3200"}, added to vendors.h on older versions of ftape.

    Problems reported with ftape 2.07 and kernel 1.12.13.  With all
    sorts of combinations of accelerator, etc, the drive may (on some
    systems) only be accessed once (<[email protected]>).  Also, after the
    first access, the next use of the tape says it is write protected
    (<[email protected]>, <[email protected]>).

    There has been one report of a problem where the tape got wound off
    the end of the spool.


         This may be caused by a dirty EOT sensor, and need not be
         a real hardware bug (except when it was a bug that dirt-
         ied the EOT sensor ...)


    Another problem has been reported with writing archives (with dd)
    to the tape.  It may start fine, but when the driver catches up
    with dd, it stops the tape and rewinds it to the beginning.  Then
    it starts winding on through the tape ad infinitum.  It appears to
    occur when the driver asks the tape to pause which should cause the
    tape to move back by 3 segments, but instead is moves back to the
    beginning of the tape.  A bug fix submitted is reported to not
    solve the problem.


         Should have been fixed somewhere between ftape-3.00 and
         ftape-4.00. Unluckily, the fast-skipping facilities of
         all Iomega floppy tape drives are really poor. Recent
         ftape versions work around this problem. I suggest get-
         ting the latest version of the ftape driver when you
         experience this problem.



    Iomega Ditto 800 Insider
       Works with Travan TR1, TR2, or DC2120 tapes
       (<[email protected]>).


    Iomega Ditto 2GB
       Support added by Jochen Hoenicke
       <[email protected]> to ftape-3.xx and
       later.

       Can't format cartridges, writing is only possible with special
       Ditto 2GB cartridges (hardware limitation, not a lacking feature
       of ftape).


    Iomega Ditto Max

    Iomega Ditto Max Pro
       Supported since ftape-4.00. Thanks to Tim Jones
       <[email protected]>.

       Can't format cartridges, writing is only possible with special
       Ditto Max cartridges (hardware limitation, not a lacking feature
       of ftape)

       I wasn't able to get the Ditto Max to work with any other device
       than /dev/[n]qft0. I don't know whether this is a feature of the
       Ditto Max or the Ditto EZ controller I had plugged the Ditto Max
       into.

       (* You don't need to buy a Ditto Max Pro to use the 5/10GB
       cartridges. With ftape there is no real difference between the
       Ditto Max and the Ditto Max Pro.  *)


    Iomega Ditto 800/3200/2GB/Max/Max Pro Easy (parallel port)
       Supported since ftape-4.00 with the bpck-fdc FDC driver.


    Mountain FS8000


    Reveal TB1400

       Reported not to work with kernel 1.3.79 and ftape (no version
       given) or with kernel 1.2.13 and zftape 1.04
       (<[email protected]>).


         The mentioned ftape driver versions are out of date. If
         you still have such a beast try the more recent versions
         of the ftape driver.



    Summit SE 150, SE 250


    Tallgrass FS300
       If you have a Tallgrass FS300 and an AHA1542B, you need to
       increase the bus-on / bus-off time of the 1542B.  Antti Virjo
       (<[email protected]>), says that changing CMD_BUSON_TIME to 4 and
       CMD_BUSOFF_CMD to 12 in linux/drivers/scsi/aha1542.c will do the
       trick.


    Teac 800


    Memorex tape drive backup system


    Wangtek 3040F, 3080F


 You can always check out the newest list of drives that are recognised
 by ftape, by looking in the file vendors.h in the ftape distribution.

 Although I do not want to endorse one drive type over another, it has
 been reported that the Colorado DJ-20 drive is rather noisy, when
 compared to, say, a Conner C250MQ drive ('tis said that the Colorado
 is 5-10 times as noisy as the Conner drive. Since I have neither, I
 can't tell for sure).


      If you have a drive that works fine, but it is not listed
      here, or if you have corrections to the above information,
      please send a mail to the HOWTO maintainer
      (<[email protected]>).



 6.2.  Supported special controllers


 These dedicated high-speed tape controllers are supported by ftape:


 o  Colorado FC-10, FC-20

 o  Mountain MACH-2

 o  Iomega Tape Accelerator II

 o  2Mbps controllers (using the i82078-1 fdc)

 o  Iomega Ditto EZ 4Mbps PnP controller


 6.2.1.  Colorado FC-10, FC-20


 Support for the FC-10 controller has been merged into the ftape driver
 in version 1.12. See the RELEASE-NOTES and the Makefile files in the
 ftape distribution.  Since of version 2.03 of ftape, the FC-20
 controller will work, but only at 1Mbit/sec (check the Release
 notes!).


 6.2.2.  Mountain MACH-2


 The support for the MACH-2 controller was added in ftape-1.14d.


 6.2.3.  Iomega Tape Accelerator II


 To use the Iomega Tape Accelerator II (not to be mistaken as the
 Iomega Ditto Dash!), use -DMACH2, and set the right settings for I/O
 base, IRQ and DMA.  This works (by the empirical testing of Scott
 Bailey <[email protected]>), with at least ftape-2.02.


 6.2.4.  Iomega Ditto Dash and other 2Mbps controllers


 The Iomega Ditto Dash, and all other known 2Mbps controllers, use the
 Intel 82078-1 chip, which can run at 2Mbps. This is supported properly
 since ftape-3.00.


 6.2.5.  Iomega Ditto EZ PnP controller


 This controller requires the use of e.g. the isapnptools package to
 configure it. You may get it from
 http://www.roestock.demon.co.uk/isapnptools/

 The controller will cause too many overrun errors when used at the
 highest possible speed of 4Mbps. Neither Tim Jones <[email protected]>
 nor I <[email protected]> have been able to find but a single
 system which could run the controller at 4Mbps. 3Mbps seems to  be
 fine.

 If you configure the Ditto EZ to use DMA 2 (the DMA channel used by
 the floppy controller) then your floppy drive will no longer work. It
 doesn't help to disable the controllers DMA gate (as is the case with
 other hight speed controllers) so this can't be helped from inside
 ftape.


 6.3.  Unsupported tape drives



 o  Some parallel port floppy tape drives still not work. Others do.

 o  Irwin AX250L / Accutrak 250. (not a QIC-80 drive)

 o  IBM Internal Tape Backup Unit (identical to the Irwin AX250L drive)

 o  COREtape light

 The Irwin AX250L (and the IBM Internal Tape Backup Unit) does not work
 the ftape.  This is because they only support QIC-117, but not the
 QIC-80 standard (they use Irwin's proprietary ``servoe (Rhomat)''
 format).  I know nothing about the Rhomat format, nor where to get any
 info on it.  Sorry.

 The COREtape light does not accept the initialisation commands, we're
 feeding it. This pretty much leaves the drive unusable.


 6.4.  Using an external tape drive with ftape


 If you have a floppy controller which has a female DB37 connector on
 the bracket (and some means of delivering power to the drive), you can
 use it with ftape.  OK, that sentence was not very obvious. Let's try
 it this way: Some FDC's (the very ancient one's), have a DB37
 connector on the bracket, for connecting to external floppy drives.

 If you make a suitable cable from the DB37 connector (on the FDC) to
 your external tape drive, you can get ftape to control your tape
 drive.

 This is because that from a program's view there is no difference
 between the internal and the external connectors. So, from ftape's
 point of view, they are identical.


 o  Pins 20-37: GROUND

 o  1: +12 Volt (POWER)

 o  2: +12 Volt return (GROUND)

 o  3: +5 Volt return (GROUND)

 o  4: +5 Volt (POWER)


 o  5: 2

 o  6: 8

 o  7: 10

 o  8: 12

 o  9: 14

 o  10: 16

 o  11: 18

 o  12: 20

 o  13: 22

 o  14: 24

 o  15: 26

 o  16: 28

 o  17: 30

 o  18: 32

 o  19: 34

 The power connector is of the "mini" type, sitting on 3.5" floppy
 drives.  The idea appears to be that you plug one of the power
 connectors from the PSU to this connector on the board.  If you want
 to use just a single cable, you might want to get a 50 wire cable, and
 use multiple wires for the power lines (and ground, for that matter).

 I have received no confirmation from anyone that this works.  Let me
 know your results if you try it.



 6.5.  PCI motherboards and ftape


 Unfortunately, some PCI motherboards cause problems when running
 ftape.  Some people have experienced that ftape would not run in a PCI
 based box, but ran flawlessly in a normal ISA based 386DX machine.  If
 you have such a problem, please read the README.PCI file in the ftape
 distribution.


      A floppy disk controller needs the ISA bus DMA controller
      for its memory transfers. Seemingly the ISA DMA controller
      doesn't get control over the memory bus often enough on some
      PCI based systems.



 7.  Backing up and restoring data


 This section describes some simple uses of tar and mt. Other examples
 can be found in the ftape-manual of the ftape-doc package. The ftape-
 tools contains some simple automated DejaGnu (-- Package for writing
 automated tests.--)

 test-suites. See section ``Getting ftape'' for informations about
 where to download those additional packages from.


 7.1.  Writing an archive to a tape


 You can use `tar', `dd', `cpio', and `afio'. You will need to use `mt'
 to get the full potential of your tapes and the ftape driver.  For a
 start I'd recommend using `tar', as it can archive lots of directories
 and let you pick out separate files from an archive.  cpio creates
 smaller archives and is more generally more flexible than tar, but is
 missing some features like volume labels.  `afio' creates backups
 where each file is compressed individually and then concatenated.
 This will allow you to access the files ``after'' the point of the
 error.  If you use gzipped tar files, all data after the point of the
 error is lost! (to me, this is a pretty good reason for NOT using
 compression on backups).  The choice of which is most appropriate
 depends on the situation and the features and malfeatures of each of
 the packages.  I recommend taking a look at each package at reviewing
 the options that each provides.  It's possible that this HOWTO may
 provide more detail on this subject at some point in the future.

 There are more links pointing to backup software at http://www-
 math.math.rwth-aachen.de/~LBFM/claus/ftape/ in the software section of
 that page.

 To make a backup of your kernel source tree using tar, do this
 (assuming you have the sources in /usr/src/linux):



              # cd /usr/src
              # tar cf /dev/ftape linux



 This will not compress the files, but gives you a smoother tape run.
 If you want the compression (and you've got tar 1.11.2), you just
 include the -z flag(*), eg: `tar czf /dev/ftape linux'

 For further instructions on how to use tar, dd and mt look at the man
 pages and the texinfo files that comes with the respective
 distributions.

 (*) tar assumes that the first argument is options, so the `-' is not
 necessary, i.e. these two commands are the same: `tar xzf /dev/ftape'
 and `tar -xzf /dev/ftape'



 7.2.  Restoring an archive


 OK, let us restore the backup of the kernel source you made in section
 ``Writing an archive to a tape'' above.  To do this you simply say



              tar xf /dev/ftape


 If you used compression, you will have to say



              tar xzf /dev/ftape



 When you use compression, gzip will complain about trailing garbage
 after the very end of the archive (and this will lead to a `broken
 pipe' message).  This can be safely ignored.

 For the other utilities, please read the man page.



 7.3.  Testing the archive


 tar has an option (-d) for detecting differences between two archives.
 To test your backup of the kernel source say



              tar df /dev/ftape



 If you do not have the man page for tar, you are not lost (yet); tar
 has a built-in option list: try `tar --help 2>&1 | less'


 7.4.  Putting more than one backup on a tape



 To put more than one backup on a tape you must have the mt utility.
 You will probably have it already, if you got one of the mainline
 distributions (eg. Slackware or Debian).

 Programs like tar and cpio generate a single Tape ARchive and know
 nothing about multiple files or positioning of a tape, it just reads
 or writes from/to a device. mt knows everything about moving the tape
 back and forth, but nothing about reading the data off the tape.  As
 you might have guessed, combining tar or cpio with mt does the trick.

 By using the nqft[0-3] (nftape) device, you can use `mt' to position
 the tape the correct place (`mt -f /dev/nqft0 fsf 2' means step over
 two ``file marks'', i.e.  tar files) and then use tar or cpio to read
 or write the relevant data.

 The most common use of the non-rewinding device is to append another
 backup to an existing tape.  Here are the specific steps with a little
 explanation thrown in for good measure.


 o  Insert a tape into the drive.  On some devices this may cause the
    tape to be rewound.

 o  Issue an End-of-Tape command to the NON-rewinding device.



         mt -f /dev/n???? eof



 The tape should now be positioned at the End-of-Data (EOD). The tape
 won't move unless a program opens the device, closes the rewinding
 device, removes the device driver from kernel memory (rmmod) or ejects
 the tape.  Using `mt eof' may be faster on QIC tapes.

 o  The next tape operation will start at the EOD mark.  If you perform
    a write, it will append a new `file'.  If you perform a read it
    will fail with EOF.  The EOD mark on most tape formats is actually
    two consecutive EOF marks, however, since version 3.xx ftape  uses
    the volume table as specified in the QIC-113 standard to emulate
    file marks, thus there aren't two consecutive file marks at EOD.
    Writing the EOF marks is handled by either the device driver or the
    hardware when a close() is performed.

 o  Here's where you write the actual data to the tape.

 o  Here's the important part. Now rewind the tape.  Both ftape caches
    some information that belongs in the header segments on the tape
    and update those header segments only when the tape is rewound.
    This caching is necessary because rewinding the tape and updating
    the header segments takes a conspicuous amount of time.  The
    drawback of this caching is that you will lose information if you
    have written to the tape and not rewound the device.



 7.5.  Appending files to an archive


 ``Is there a way to extend an archive -- put a file on the tape, then
 later, add more to the tape?''

 No. The tar documentation will tell you to use `tar -Ar', but it does
 not work.  This is a limitation of the current ftape driver.



 7.6.  Mount/unmounting tapes


 Since a tape does not have a ``filesystem'' on it, you do not mount /
 unmount the tape.  To backup, you just insert the tape and run your
 `tar' command (or whatever you use to access the tape with).



 8.  Creating an emergency boot floppy for ftape


 (* As of the time of this writing (August 1998) I remember that I have
 read about several emergency disk sets in the c.o.l.a
 (comp.os.linux.announce) news group since the time this section has
 been written. Some of those packages actually might produce rather
 sophisticated emergency boot floppy sets. Please check out yourself.
 I didn't try to create an emergency boot floppy with recent versions
 of ftape.  *)

 This section was written by Claus Toendering <[email protected]>.

 Once you are the happy owner of a tape drive and several tapes full of
 backups, you will probably ask yourself this question: ``If everything
 goes wrong, and I completely lose my hard disk, how do I restore my
 files from tape?''

 What you need is an emergency floppy disk that contains enough files
 to enable you to boot Linux and restore your hard disk from tape.

 The first thing you should do is to read ``The Linux Bootdisk HOWTO''
 written by Graham Chapman <[email protected]>.  That document tells
 you almost everything you need to know about making an emergency
 floppy boot kit.  The paragraphs below contain a few extra pieces of
 information that will make your life a bit easier when you follow
 Graham Chapman's procedures:


 o  You don't really need /etc/init, /etc/inittab, /etc/getty, and
    /etc/rc.d/* on your floppy disk.  If Linux doesn't find /etc/init,
    it will start /bin/sh on your console, which is fine for restoring
    your system.  Deleting these files gives you extra space on your
    floppy, which you will probably need.

 o  Find a small version of /bin/sh.  They are frequently available on
    the boot floppies that come with a Linux distribution.  This again
    will give you extra space.  I'd suggest ash, which is extremely
    small (approx 62Kbytes), and yet very bash compatible.

 o  The /etc/fstab you include on your floppy disk should look
    something like this:


              /dev/fd0        /               minix   defaults
              none            /proc           proc    defaults
              /dev/hda        /mnt            ext2    defaults



 Once you have booted from your floppy, give the command:


              mount -av



 o  Make sure your floppy drive is not mounted when you access the
    streamer tape!  Otherwise you may get the following error message:


              Unable to grab IRQ6 for ftape driver



 This means that you MUST load the floppy into a RAMDISK.

 This has the unfortunate consequence that the programs needed to
 restore the files from the tape can not be located on a separate
 floppy disk.  You have two options here:

    1. You place tar (or cpio or afio or whatever other backup program
       you use) on your root floppy disk.  (This is where you'll need
       all the extra space created in the steps above.)

    2. Before you start restoring from tape, copy tar (or cpio or afio
       or whatever) to your hard disk and load it from there.

 o  Apart from your backup program, you will probably need mt on your
    root floppy as well.

 o  Make sure your ftape device (typically /dev/nqft0) is present on
    your boot floppy.

 o  Finally: TRY IT OUT! Of course, I don't recommend that you destroy
    your hard disk contents to see if you are able to restore
    everything.  What I do recommend, however, is that you try booting
    from your emergency disks and make sure that you can at least make
    a file listing of the contents of your backup tape.



 9.  Frequently Asked Questions


 (* This is the literal inclusion of the Ftape Frequently Asked
 questions collection which is maintained by Johan De Wit
 <[email protected]> and which may be viewed on the web at
 http://www.correct.nl/~ftape.  As Linuxdoc SGML doesn't include sub-
 sub-sections into the table of contents, I have prepended the word FAQ
 to the sections of the original FAQ document.  *)

 This FAQ collection might be slightly out of data as it was collected
 while version 3.04d of the ftape driver was the newest one. If any
 answer given in the FAQ contradicts any other statement of this HOWTO,
 then please disregard the answer in the FAQ and drop me
 (<[email protected]>) as well as the maintainer of the Ftape-
 FAQ (Johan De Wit <[email protected]>) a note


 You might encounter references to the following addresses while
 reading this document:


 o  The maintainer of the Ftape FAQ :

    Johan De Wit <[email protected]>

 o  The Ftape maintainer :

    Claus-Justus Heine <[email protected]>

 o  The Ftape Home Page :

    <http://www-math.math.rwth-aachen.de/~LBFM/claus/ftape/>

 o  Mirrors of the Ftape Home Page :

    <http://www.torque.net/ftape/>

    Thanks to Grant R. Guenther <[email protected]>

    <http://www.info-systems.com/ftape/>

    Thanks to Jakob Curdes <[email protected]>

    <http://www.newwave.net/~joshg/ftape/>

    Thanks to Josh Goins <[email protected]>


 o  The Ftape HOWTO :

    <http://sunsite.unc.edu/LDP/HOWTO>

 o  The Ftape Mailing List :

    <[email protected]>


 There is surely quite a lot missing. Please feel free to improve this
 FAQ.  The preferred way of doing this is to post to the Ftape Mailing
 List in case you have a question that isn't answered here.

 Also, if you are already reading the list regularly and have the
 impression that some questions occur again and again, feel free to
 send that question and possibly an answer in the format indicated
 below to the maintainer of the Ftape FAQ AND to Ftape Mailing List.

 If you make FAQ related postings, then please DON'T FORGET to prepend
 the word "[FAQ]" to the subject of your posting. Please don't add the
 word "FAQ" to the subject if you post something that isn't related to
 the FAQ.

 That's all for now.

 Claus-Justus Heine.


 10.  FAQ: "Compiling and installing Ftape" related questions !



 10.1.  What Ftape version should I use?


 Always the latest stable version which is _supposed_ to be available
 from ftp://sunsite.unc.edu/pub/Linux/kernel/tapes and http://www-
 math.math.rwth-aachen.de/~LBFM/claus/ftape/

 At time of this writing the latest stable version is ftape-4.02.

 <answer from Claus Heine>

 10.2.  I'm having problems getting my XYZ drive to run under the
 2.0.xx kernel with the built-in driver.  How do I fix this?


 The default version of Ftape included in the 2.0.xx kernel sources is
 2.08 or 2.09 and is very out of date.  Please update the Ftape drivers
 to the latest from the Ftape Home Page.

 <answer from Tim Jones>

 10.3.  I'm running Linux/SMP and the system just freezes when trying
 to access the Ftape devices!


 You need to add -D__SMP__ to the KERNEL_OPT variable in the file
 MCONFIG. In newer ftape versions you only need to uncomment a certain
 line in the MCONFIG file.

 <answer from Claus Heine>


 10.4.  Why does depmod complain about "undefined symbols"?


 Ignore the depmod error messages. The problem is that the Ftape
 modules have to be compiled without the version checksum feature (i.e.
 CONFIG_MODVERSIONS) with 2.0.* kernels. This causes no problem, even
 when the modules are used with a kernel that has support for this
 feature; only that depmod wrongly complains about undefined symbols.
 Ignore the complaints of depmod and try to insert the modules despite
 of these complaints:


      modprobe zftape



 If this fails, something is wrong.

 <answer from Claus Heine>


 10.5.  "insmod" says the kernel version is wrong


 The insmod program can check the kernel version against the version
 that Ftape was compiled for in two ways: It can directly compare the
 kernel version number recorded in the Ftape module against the version
 of the running kernel, or, if both the kernel and Ftape is compiled
 with versioned symbols, compare the version of the used kernel
 symbols.

 If you have upgraded your version of GCC to v2.7.0 or later, you must
 recompile the modules utilities with gcc v2.7.x.

 Newer versions of insmod allows you to "force" insertion of a module
 into the kernel, even though the version string is incorrect.

 <from the Ftape-Howto>


 10.6.  "insmod" says that kernel 1.2.0 and 1.2.0 differ


 Did you remember to apply the ksyms.c patch to the kernel?  If not,
 read the README.linux-1.2 file in the source distribution.

 <from the Ftape-Howto>


 10.7.  Trying to compile Ftape gives me the error "modversions.h: no
 such file or directory"


 The modversions.h file is created when the kernel is compiled with the
 configuration item CONFIG_MODVERSIONS turned on.  With this option
 enabled, the file will be created during the make dep step.

 One more handy tip is that a make mrproper will remove
 /usr/include/linux/modversions.h.  You will need to reconfig the
 kernel and do a make dep to get the file back.


 <from the Ftape-Howto>


 10.8.  What is this versioned symbols stuff anyway?


 When you say `yes' to CONFIG_MODVERSIONS during `make config', all the
 symbols exported by the kernel, i.e: the symbols that the loadable
 modules can "see", are augmented to include a checksum across the
 types of the call/return parameters.  This allows insmod to detect
 whether the definition of a variable or function in the kernel has
 changed since the time when Ftape was compiled.

 This ensures a high degree of safety, such that you do not crash the
 kernel because you used an outdated module with your kernel.

 If you enable CONFIG_MODVERSIONS in the kernel, make sure you have

 -DMODVERSIONS -include /usr/include/linux/modversions.h


 uncommented in the MODULE_OPT line in the Ftape Makefile.  Conversely,
 if you do not have CONFIG_MODVERSIONS enabled, make sure you have it
 commented out.

 <from the Ftape-Howto>


 10.9.  I seem to be getting sftape instead of zftape. When I run "ftmt
 status" command, I get output that the Ftape docs says corresponds to
 sftape ( /dev/qft0: Invalid argument ). Why?


 There are (at least) two possible sources of the problem:

 o  All Ftape-3.* versions prior to 3.04 install the modules into


      /lib/modules/misc
      instead of
      /lib/modules/uname -r/misc



 As modprobe searches in /lib/modules/misc/ last there might be an old
 ftape.o module floating around in /lib/modules/ uname -r/misc which
 modprobe finds first (uname -r stands for the kernel version).  Remove
 the old ftape.o module.

 o  Your kernel has support for Ftape compiled in. Reconfigure your
    kernel without support for Ftape (CONFIG_FTAPE) and recompile and
    install it.

 <answer from Claus Heins>


 10.10.  My Ditto DASH/FC-20/Exabyte Accelerator card works under
 Microsoft Windows, but I get a drive not found type of error in
 /var/log/messages when trying to use it under Linux.


 You are probably trying to use the same IRQ and DMA settings as your
 on-board FDC. This does not work in versions of Ftape prior to 3.03b.
 Please update the Ftape Drivers to the latest from the Ftape Home
 Page.
 <answer from Tim Jones>


 10.11.  Ftape DMA transfers gives ECC errors


 Sadly to say there are some SVGA cards and Ethernet cards that do not
 decode their addresses correct.  This typically happens when the Ftape
 buffers are in the range 0x1a0000 to 0x1c0000.  Somehow, the DMA write
 cycles get clobbered and every other byte written gets a bad value
 (0xff).  These problems are reported to happen with both SVGA and
 Ethernet cards.  We know of at least one (bad?) ATI 16bit VGA card
 that caused this.

 The easiest solution is to put the card in an 8bit slot (it is often
 not enough to reconfigure the card to 8bit transfers).  Moving the
 Ftape buffer away from the VGA range is only a partial solution; All
 DMA buffers used in Linux can have this problem!  Let us make this one
 clear: This has nothing to do with the Ftape software.

 <from the Ftape-Howto>


 10.12.  Help! I'm getting 'dmaalloc() failed' in my syslog file.


 You should only see this is you are trying to insmod the ftape.o
 module.  Try running swapout first.  It is provided with the
 standalone Ftape source.  It doesn't appear in the Ftape source that's
 provided with the kernel.

 Here's an example of how you can set your rc.local file to use it.



      # Install the Floppy Tape Driver
      if [ -f /boot/modules/`uname -r`/misc/ftape.o ]; then
         echo Installing ftape for Linux `uname -r`
         swapout
         insmod /boot/modules/`uname -r`/misc/ftape.o
      fi



 Please note that you won't have this type of problem if you compile
 the Ftape driver into the kernel.

 <from the Ftape-Howto>


 10.13.  Syslogd works overtime when running Ftape


 The compile-time options NO_TRACE and NO_TRACE_AT_ALL in Ftape control
 the amount of system logging.  Add whichever is appropriate to the
 FTAPE_OPT line in the Makefile and recompile.

 <from the Ftape-Howto>


 10.14.  How do I change the trace-level?


 There are three ways you can do this (in order of personal
 preference).
 While we're at it, here are the meanings of the various trace levels.


 o  0 Bugs

 o  1 + Errors

 o  2 + Warnings

 o  3 + Information

 o  4 + More information

 o  5 + Program flow

 o  6 + FDC/DMA info

 o  7 + Data flow

 o  8 + Everything else


 1. Using insmod to change trace-level

    If you are using the modules mechanism to load the Ftape driver,
    you can specify the tracing level as an option to the insmod
    command.


              /sbin/insmod ftape.o tracing=<tracing-level>



 2. Using mt to change trace-level

    The Ftape driver has a hack in it that allows the fsr option in mt
    to be used to set the tracing level.  zftape does not have this
    hack.


              mt -f /dev/ftape fsr <tracing-level>



 The use of the fsr command in mt is a hack, and will probably disap-
 pear or change with time.

 3. Recompiling to change trace-level

    The file tracing.c contains a line int tracing = 3;.  Change the 3
    to whatever is appropriate and recompile.

 <From the Ftape-Howto>


 10.15.  I'm having problems with Ftape.  I'm using the latest version
 of Ftape from the Ftape Home Page and believe that I've located a real
 bug. What should I do?


 Check the Ftape Home Page.  for an even newer version. Then check the
 FAQ contained in the that package if your problem is listed there.
 Next, try to check if the manual that comes with the Ftape
 distribution mentions your problem.
 There is no need to read the entire manual, simply check the "Concept
 Index" if it contains a keyword that might be related to your problem,
 then jump to the proper location in the manual.

 If you are still convinced you've found a bug, then post a general
 question describing the problem to the Linux-Tape Mailing List , but
 do not attach your entire Ftape error-log. If we've seen the problem
 before, we'll let you know where the resolution effort stands.  If we
 haven't, the Ftape maintainer will most likely request that you send
 him the entire Ftape error-log (snipped from your system messages
 file).

 <answer from Tim Jones>


 11.  FAQ: "Using Ftape" related questions !



 11.1.  How fast is Ftape ?


 You can achieve quite respectable backup and restore speeds with
 Ftape: a Colorado DJ-20 and an Adaptec 1542CF controller, has been
 measured at 4.25Mbyte/min sustained data transfer rate (no
 compression) across a 70Mbyte tar archive, while comparing the archive
 on the tape with data on an IDE disk.  The speed of Ftape is mostly
 dependent on the data transfer rate of your FDC: The AHA1542CF has a
 ``post-1991 82077'' FDC, and it will push 1Mbit/sec at the tape drive.
 If you have an FDC which can only deliver 500Kbit/sec data rates, you
 will see half the transfer rate (well, roughly).



 11.2.  When I write to some of my tapes, they seem to spend a lot of
 time "shoe-shining," or repositioning instead of streaming.  Is some-
 thing wrong with my system?


 There has been a few reports of "shoeshining".  This is when the tape
 just seems to run back and forth endlessly.  This has been seen on a
 Jumbo 250 ([email protected]) and on an Iomega 250 Ditto
 Insider ([email protected]). In the latter case it has been narrowed
 own to using an ELF Linux and running off a SCSI hard disk (connected
 to an Adaptec 1542cf).  Please contact me if you have an update to
 this problem.

 <from the Ftape-Howto>

 Probably not. If you are backing up a large number of < 2K files,
 you're just going to have to live with it.  In this event, the
 repositions are caused by file system access overhead. If you are
 backing up a normal system's files, this may be caused by slop or
 media stretching in the tape cartridge. By simply retensioning the
 tape, you should see this go away. Try


      ftmt -f /dev/zqft0 reten



 to retension the tape. If retensioning doesn't solve this, and it's
 only happening on certain tapes, it might be wise to replace the tapes
 in question.

 <answer from Tim Jones>

 If you use afio as your backup tool you can set it to write a very
 large number of buffers in one hit by using the -c flag. Make it large
 enough so that you supply enough data for most of a single end-to-end
 pass over the tape.  For my system, the following streams quite nicely
 - stopping relatively few times per tape pass on an unloaded system:


      find /usr/local -xdev -print | afio -o -v -f -b 10240 -c 800 /dev/qft0



 In my case I'm writing 800 x 10240 bytes per tape write, i.e. about
 8MB.  haven't experimented that much with these settings - so someone
 might like to establish more optimal ones.

 Presumably other backup utilities could be modified to use a similar
 technique.

 <answer by Michael Hamilton>

 GNU tar doesn't use buffering in this way. The commercial backup
 program "bru" is able to multi-buffer using shared memory; this works
 only when writing compressed archive with bru (regardless whether you
 use Ftape's builtin compression)

 Another way to overcome the problem might be to use more dma buffers
 in the Ftape kernel driver like:


      mt -f /dev/qft0 setdrvbuffer $((6*32786))



 $((6*32786)) should be expanded by your shell when using a Bourne com-
 patible one. This has a negative impact on the system's memory pool:
 Ftape's dma buffers cannot be used by any other part of the kernel nor
 by any other application. And kernel memory cannot be swapped out. If
 you decide to use this kind of multi-buffering then you should unload
 the driver as soon as it isn't needed any longer.

 <answer by Claus Heine>


 11.3.  Do I have to reboot to the DOS world to format tapes?


 Not if you are using the latest version of the Ftape drivers from  the
 Ftape Home Page.

 To format a QIC-80, TR-1, TR-3, QICWide 3010 or 3020 tape, get the
 latest version of ftape and the latest version of the ftape-tools
 package (from the same location) and read the documentation of the
 ftformat utility which is included in the ftape-tools package.

 (* Do not try to format Ditto 2GB tapes.  *)

 (* Do not try to format Ditto Max or Max Pro tapes.  *)

 <answers from Tim Jones and Claus Heine>



 11.4.  Is it possibly to format Ditto 2GB tapes with ftape?


 It isn't possible to format Ditto 2GB tapes with Ditto 2GB tape drive,
 and it isn't possible at all to re-format Ditto 2GB tapes in a way
 that they still can be used by a Ditto 2GB tape drive.

 This is a hardware limitation of the Ditto 2GB tape drive. It can't be
 helped at the software level, i.e. it isn't ftape's fault.


 11.5.  Is it possibly to format Ditto Max or Max Pro tapes with ftape?


 No, the Ditto Max can't format tapes.

 This is a hardware limitation of the Ditto Max (Pro) tape drive. It
 can't be helped at the software level, i.e. it isn't ftape's fault.


 11.6.  Ftape detects more bad sectors than DOS on QIC-3020 tapes


 If you look at the difference, you will notice that Ftape always
 detects 2784 sectors more than DOS.

 The number that Ftape reports is correct (of course :-). Each
 correctly formatted QIC-3020 tape has 2784 sectors at fixed positions
 that are marked in the bad sector map. To quote from the specs:


      Tracks 5,7,9,11,13,15,17,19,21,23,25 and 27 within 4 seg-
      ments of either EOT or BOT are prone to increased error
      rates due to hole imprints.  Therefore, these regions shall
      be mapped as bad at format time and entered in the bad sec-
      tor map by indicating that all sectors within the identified
      segments are bad.


 This gives 12 tracks * 2 * 4 segments * 29 sectors == 2784 sectors.

 So Ftape choose to report the real number of sectors that cannot be
 used on the tape, while DOS gives a more optimistic number giving a
 better indication of tape quality.  (Ftape's behavior might change in
 the future to detect correct formatting and display the separate
 numbers. It has rather low priority though).

 QIC-3010 are alike QIC-3020 tapes regarding this.

 <from the Ftape-Howto>


 11.7.  Is it ok that I'm not hearing the tape move when I do a fsf or
 a bsf with mt?


 Yes.  The driver merely updates an internal counter when those
 commands are issues.  The tape should move to the proper location on
 the next read or write access to the tape drive.

 <from the Ftape-Howto>



 11.8.  Why does my XYZ backup program complain about "Invalid argu-
 ment" errors?


 zftape requires the data to be written in multiples of a fixed minimal
 block size. This is a very usual behavior for a tape device. There are
 three ways to get rid of those errors:

 o  set Ftape's block size to the block size used by the backup
    program. The example below works for "afio":


      mt -f /dev/qft0 setblk 5120



 o  If you don't want to use Ftape's built in compression you can also
    use


      mt -f /dev/qft0 setblk 0



 to switch Ftape to variable block size mode and be able to write the
 data in arbitrary portions to the tape (BUT: the builtin compression
 doesn't work with this setting). When you intend to use "KBackup" then
 this is the only way to make it work together with Ftape (it _may_
 work, don't know if it does)

 o  tell your backup program about Ftape's default block size of 10k
    (which is also the default of GNU tar). For "afio" you can use the
    following command line switch:


      afio -b 10k ...



 You may want to read the section "Tape blocks" of the manual (use its
 "Concept index" to directly jump to that section)

 When using GNU tar's builtin compression with GNU tar versions prior
 to tar-1.12 one needs to run tar with the --block-compress switch to
 re-block the output to the tape.  Otherwise tar will compress the data
 it reads, and write it in arbitrary portions to the tape.



      Example :

      tar -czvf /dev/qft0 --block-compress /etc



 WARNING: One shouldn't use tar's builtin compression with large
 backups as it makes the entire data stream one huge compressed block.
 If such archives are corrupted right at the beginning it will be very
 difficult to recover.

 <answer by Claus Heine>

 11.9.  I/O errors and FDC - some explanations.


 When you get next messages, this could be interesting for you !


 o  fdc-io.c (ft_handle_perpend) - Your FDC does not support QIC-3020.

 o  Cannot write to /dev/qft0: I/O error

 The explanations:

 "FDC" menas "Floppy Disk Controller". The problem is that your floppy
 disk controller must be able to support something that is called
 "perpendicular mode" to be able to read and write QIC-3020/QIC-3010
 cartridges (i.e. TR-3 cartridges). To my knowledge all FDCs that are
 capable of at least 1Mbit/sec data transfer rate also support
 "perpendicular mode" ("perpendicular" refers to the direction of
 magnetization of the ferro-magnetic particles on the tape).

 This means that you need to purchase another FDC. Either look around
 some computer stores and ask for an IO controller cards that is able
 to support 2.88 Mb floppies (which imlies 1Mbit data transfer rate and
 perpendicular mode).

 Or get one of the so called "high speed" controllers that even support
 2Mbit/sec data transfer rate. Those controllers are based on an Intel
 82078 FDC. Iomega sells such a card under the name "Ditto Dash". I
 think Exabyte sells their 2Mbit controllers separately, too, whereas
 Seagate ships its TR-3 drives (i.e. the TST-3200) together with such a
 controller.


 <answer from Claus Heine>


 11.10.  Why do I get "/dev/qft0: No such device" errors?


 I assume that the following is the problem: The Ftape module is loaded
 OK into the kernel:


      /usr/src/ftape-3.03b-970603# lsmod
       Module         Pages    Used by
       ftape             22            0



 but then this happens:


      $ ftmt -f /dev/qft0 status
      ftmt: /dev/qft0: No such device



 Solution You need to load the zftape.o module as well. With Ftape-3.*
 the ftape.o module doesn't implement the VFS interface. This is done
 by zftape.o.

 <answer from Claus Heine>


 11.11.  I get "device busy" when I make multiple backups on a tape
 using some script.


 The "device busy" messages can only occur while the Ftape devices are
 still held open by some program. As soon as the close() system call
 has completed the busy flag is cleared. May be "bru" or some other
 program has still forked off a child that dies delayed?

 Yes, this will reproduce the problem, it seems:


      tar -cvvzf /dev/nqft0 --block-compress ; mt rewind



 You can skip the "--block-compress" if using the most recent version
 of GNU tar.

 However, this is not a bug of Ftape. It seems that the parent tar
 process exits before its child has closed the tape device. I know,
 however, from hacking the tar code ages ago, that tar properly waits
 for its parent to die.

 However, the busy message simply means that the "busy" variable is
 still held at 1 (zftape/zftape-init.c). And this simply means that
 there still is a process hanging around that holds the tape device
 open.

 I think I have it (only for the case of tar 'cause I have the source
 code.

 If on uses tar with compression, then it forks a child which will
 become the compressor bei execing  "gzip" or whatever. Before the call
 to execlp() the child will fork off a grand child of its parent tar.
 That grandchild will do the actual tape I/O.


      tar - fork() - write to child tar
              |
            child tar - fork() - gzip (will pipe to grand child tar)
                          |
                        grand child tar - open archive.



 Now, parent tar only waits for its child to die. gzip surely doesn't
 wait for the grand child as the gzip is a result of an execlp().

 What I don't know is whether the grand child should be implicitly
 waited for by the parent tar, or if the wait() function also waits for
 grand childs.

 But this seems to be the problem: the parent tar already has exited
 while its grandchild still is busy closing the archive. One hardly
 will notice this problem if the close() happens fast (i.e. regular
 files, block devices, also other tape devices?), but it isn't a bug in
 Ftape, but either in the backup programs or in the kernel or maybe
 libc exit code.

 Don't know if the considerations above also apply to bru. If there is
 no grandchild and the parent process properly waits for its childs
 then there shouldn't be a problem.

 <answer from Claus Heine>


 11.12.  How do I "..." with tar?


 These are really tar questions: Please read the man page and the info
 page.  If you have not got it either, try


      tar  --help 2>&1 | less



 If your version of tar is v1.11.1 or earlier, consider upgrading to
 v1.11.8 - This version can call GNU zip directly (i.e.: it supports
 the -z option) and has an elaborate help included.  Also, it compiles
 right out of the box on Linux.

 <from the Ftape-Howto>


 11.13.  What block-size should I use with tar ?


 When using compression, and in all general, it can be a benefit to
 specify to tar, that it should block the output into chunks.  Since
 Ftape cuts things into 29Kbyte blocks, saying `-b58' should be
 optimum.

 "Why 29Kbyte?", I hear you cry.  Well, the QIC-80 standard specifies
 that all data should be protected by an Error Correcting Code (ECC)
 code.  The code specified in the QIC-80 standard is known as a Reed-
 Solomon (R-S) code.  The R-S code takes 29 data bytes and generates 3
 parity bytes.  To increase the performance of the ECC code, the parity
 bytes are generated across 29 1Kbyte sectors.  Thus, Ftape takes
 29Kbytes of data, adds 3Kbytes of ECC parity, and writes 32Kbytes to
 the tape at a time.  For this reason, Ftape will always read and write
 32K byte blocks to be able to detect (and correct) data errors.

 If you are curious, and wish to know more, look in the ecc.c and ecc.h
 files, for an explanation of the code and a reference to a textbook on
 Reed-Solomon codes.

 <from the Ftape-Howto>


 11.14.  Where can I find the tar/mt/cpio/dd binaries - sources - man-
 pages?


 All of these tools have been developed by the GNU project, and the
 source (and man page) can be fetched from just-about any ftp site in
 the world (including ftp.funet.fi, tsx-11.mit.edu, and
 sunsite.unc.edu).  In any case they can be fetched from the official
 GNU home site: prep.ai.mit.edu [18.71.0.38]:/pub/gnu.  The latest
 versions (as of September 12 1996) are:



 cpio:   2.4.2 (cpio-2.4.2.tar.gz)
 dd:     3.13 (fileutils-3.13.tar.gz)
 mt:     2.4.2 (cpio-2.4.2.tar.gz)
 tar:    1.11.8 (tar-1.11.8.tar.gz)
 gzip:   1.2.4 (gzip-1.2.4.tar.gz)



 They all compile out of the box on Linux v1.0.4 / libc v4.5.19 / gcc
 v2.5.8.

 <from the Ftape-Howto>


 11.15.  If I use tapers compression, is it a bad idea to use the com-
 pression with zftape, or would it be better to not use tapers compres-
 sion, and let zftape do it?


 It is not bad as such to compress data twice (which would be the case
 when using tapers compression together with zftape's compression) but
 it doesn't make any sense. You won't gain much further compression,
 but only waste CPU cycles.

 Tapers compression should be quite safe, as taper compresses single
 files; in contrast to tar -czf ... which makes the entire data stream
 a large compressed block of data, which is really a bad thing with
 serious backups as a single bad byte at the beginning of the archive
 can make the entire archive unusable, well, it will be at least quite
 difficult to recover.

 <Answer from Claus Heine>


 11.16.  How does zftape compression compare to say gzip -9?


 gzip -9 is better (i.e. one gains higher compression). zftape's
 compression is comparable with the Un*x compress program, but should
 be faster, and is faster than gzip.

 <Answer from Claus Heine>


 11.17.  I don't trust compression, but hear that the sftape interface
 is going away. What should I do?


 Use the zftape interface, but don't load the zft-compressor module.
 The device then becomes /dev/qft0.

 <answer from Tim Jones>


 11.18.  Ftape says "This tape has no 'Linux raw format"


 You get this complaint if you haven't erased your freshly formatted
 tape.  This is because Ftape expect a "magic header" on the tape, to
 be able that it is allowed to interpret the header segment in its own
 way (eg: file marks).  To remove the problem, say

 mt -f /dev/nftape erase


 <from the Ftape-Howto>


 11.19.  Can I exchange tapes with someone using DOS?


 No.  The DOS software conforms to the QIC-80 specs about the layout of
 the DOS filesystem, and it should(?)  be a small problem to write a
 program that can read/write the DOS format.  In fact, I'd bet that
 creating a nice user interface would be a bigger problem.

 <From the Ftape-Howto>


 11.20.  How does `mt eom' work when you've started overwriting a tape
 in the middle?


 (EOM is "End Of recorded Media", the position right after all data
 already recorded to the tape)

 One cannot use tape "files" like files on an ordinary file system.

 In principle, a tape doesn't allow anything but appending new data at
 EOM.  However, if one positiones just in the middle of the already
 recorded data AND starts writing, then the driver first deletes all
 following files (thus moving the EOM to the actual position) and then
 starts writing.

 Thus, the new EOM after finishing the write process, is then after the
 newly recorded data.

 One of the consequences of the above is, of course, that writing to
 the tape in the middle of the already recorded area, is destructive in
 the sense, that it not only overwrites the "file" the tape is
 positioned at, but also deletes all following files.

 <from the Ftape-Howto> <Answer from Claus Heine>


 11.21.  When I made backups before using taper, under the 2.0.29 ftape
 my drive didn't support fsf, under the new zftape it does, why would
 this be, and what exactly is fsf ?


 It probably didn't work before because you didn't use a


      mt -f /dev/rft0 erase



 before writing data to the cartridge. THIS ISN'T necessary any more.

 But, hey, what does mt fsf? Tape drives don't store files in the sense
 that you can use

 cp somefile /dev/my_what_ever_tape


 or be able to mount the tape drive like you could mount a harddisk.
 You can't do nothing with a tape drive but write data to it in a
 sequential manner.


 As this is quite inconvenient, somebody invented something which is
 known under the name file mark or eof mark (eof == End Of File). Those
 marks don't separate files that have been backed up to the tape
 device, but only separate blocks of data (whatever data that might
 be).

 Normally, the kernel tape device drivers take care of writing file
 marks when the tape device is closed, i.e.


      tar -cf /dev/nqft0 /bin
      tar -cf /dev/nqft0 /etc
      mt -f /dev/nqft0 rewind



 would result in a backup of all files under /bin and /etc. When the
 first tar finishes, the kernel driver will take care of writing a file
 mark to the tape at the the current tape position, and when the second
 tar process has finished, another file mark is written to the tape
 cartridge at that position.

 Now, the sense of those file marks is, that it is possible to skip
 between different archives on the tape more quickly than would be
 possible with reading the data back.

 The commands to do that are:

    mt fsf
       fast skip to the next file mark towards EOT (End Of Tape)

    mt bsf
       fast skip to the next file marks towards BOT (Begin Of Tape)

 Thus, to extract the second archive in the example above, one doesn't
 need to read the first archive back, but can proceed as follows:


      mt -f /dev/nqft0 rewind
      mt -f /dev/nqft0 fsf
      tar -xvf /dev/nqft0



 <Answer from Claus Heine>


 11.22.  What exactly is the difference between ftape, and zftape?


 When Ftape was young there were two versions of the floppy tape
 driver, one of them was called zftape because of its built-in user-
 transparent on-the-fly compression. Whether such a thing is a feature
 or a bug ('cause this needn't be done in kernel space) is another
 question. However, the ioctl interface and file mark handling provided
 by zftape was much better and had less bugs. And zftape allows to use
 floppy tape cartridges with different OS. Well, you can't exchange
 data, but zftape won't overwrite volumes created by your Windoze
 program, and vice versa.

 Nowadays, Ftape is name of the entire floppy tape driver package AND
 ftape.o is the file-name of the kernel module that implements the low-
 level hardware support. zftape has ceased to exist as a separate
 package, but the new Ftape versions (since ftape-3.00) contain a
 zftape.o module that needs to be loaded on top of ftape.o (i.e. you
 need to load BOTH modules to be able to access your floppy tape drive)
 and implements the file system interface and the advanced (?) features
 of the previous verions zftape.

 <Answer from Claus Heine>


 11.23.  What is the difference between a rewinding, and non rewinding
 drive?


 Well, the rewinding tape devices rewind the tape to BOT (Begin Of
 Tape) when the device is closed, i.e.


      tar -cvf /dev/qft0 /bin



 will rewind the tape cartridge when the tar job has finished. In con-
 trast,


      tar -cvf /dev/nqft0 /bin



 will NOT rewind the tape cartridge and leave the tape R/W head at its
 current position.

 Rewinding devices should be used when performing a single backup, non-
 rewinding devices can be useful when doing multiple backups as one
 doesn't need to space to EOM (End Of recorded Media) before appending
 another archive.

 Non-rewinding devices MUST be used when sending any of the tape motion
 command to the tape drive, such as


      mt -f /dev/nqft0 fsf



 , because when the mt process finishes then the tape device is closed
 which would result in rewinding the cartridge with the rewinding
 devices.

 <Answer from Claus Heine>


 11.24.  Can someone tell me how to use mt to rewind my TR-3 drive one
 record using zftape record, so I can verify it?


 Well, it depends. If the tape is still positioned inside the volume
 just written, "mt bsf 1" (or equivalently "mt bsf") will backspace
 just to the beginning of that volume (this is how "tar --verify"
 works). If the tape is already positioned AFTER the filemark that
 marks the end of the last written volume, then you need to issue "mt
 bsf 2"


 The logic behind this is as follows: "MTBSF count" backspaces over
 count file marks, stops, and then positions on the EOT side of the
 last skipped file mark. This means, an "mt bsf 2" will position right
 at the beginning of the previous volume.

 <answer form Claus Heine>


 11.25.  By non-rewinding, they mean that it doesn't automatically
 rewind, correct? It doesn't mean that under no circumstances it will
 rewind, right?  I tried using /dev/zqft0, and it instantly rewinds the
 tape.


 You are right: auto-rewind means, the tape is rewound when the tape
 device is closed, non-rewinding  means, the tape isn't automatically
 rewound when the tape device is closed (but you can, of course, use
 the tape motion commands BSF/FSF etc. to position the tape head at
 every position you like).

 <answer form Claus Heine>


 11.26.  What is the difference between what mt considers a record and
 what it considers a file?


 A record is the minimal amount of bytes that will be accepted by the
 tape in one read/write operation (except in "variable block size mode"
 where it just should be the amount of data actually written in a
 single write operation??).

 For zftape every read and write access has to be a multiple of a fixed
 block size (fixed, but tunable with MTSETBLK). This block size is a
 "tape record" (as mentioned in the GNU mt man page and defaults to
 10kb for zftape.

 A "file" (in the sense of the mt man page) is a, well, misleading
 terminus. What is meant is an area of the tape between two file marks.
 This is not a file like a file on the file system, in the sense that
 it could have a name, file access modes, could be moved or copied with
 cp, mv, rm etc.

 Instead, It simply is the area of the tape that was recorded in one
 backup session, its end is marked by a tape file mark, and its
 beginning is delimited by either BOT or the file mark of the previous
 tape "file". That tape "files" are the things that can be skipped with
 the MTBSF/FSF commands.

 <answer form Claus Heine>


 11.27.  Reusing tapes with zftape without reformatting the tape.


 We try to answer the followong questions :

 o  Is there a good way to erase, as in remove the data or at least the
    volumes from a tape, without reformating?

 o  Can you overwrite the last volume on a tape with making a mess out
    of it?

 o  Can you overwrite the last several volumes without making a mess?


 o  Can you delete the last volume?

 If you want to "erase" an entire cartridge, then simply do:



      mt -f /dev/qft0 erase



 This will erase the volume table (i.e. the "file marks").

 Pre-ftape-3.x releases of zftape and ftape used to allow overwriting
 of already existing volumes on a cartridge. I have removed this
 feature as it was reported that it already has caused data-loss with
 some backup programs.

 If you indeed need to remove some volumes on the tape then you should
 use the



      vtblc



 program that comes with the ftape-tools package which can be down-
 loaded from the same locations as the ftape kernel driver package.
 Please refer to the documentation which is contained in the ftape-
 tools package for more information.

 If you simply want to reuse old tapes, then it suffices to do



      mt rewind



 If the tape is at BOT (Begin Of Tape) then every write access to the
 tape will silently erase all file marks and overwrite the data already
 existing on the tape.

 <answer by Claus Heine>


 11.28.  This script implements a simple contents listing for the
 zftape package using the "MTIOCVOLINFO" ioctl.


 Here is as little perl/bash script that lists the contents of a
 cartridge using the zftape specific "volinfo" ioctl. Hope this shows
 how to handle this kind of stuff.

 What it basically does is the following:


 1. Rewind the cartridge

 2. Issue the volinfo command:



    claus@thales:~$ mt volinfo
    file number          = 1
    block size           = 10240
    physical space used  =  522.0 kilobytes
    real size of volume  =  520.0 kilobytes



 Parse the ouput and place the values in appropriate variables

 3. Skip to the next volume with "mt fsf"

 4. Exit if this gives an error (EOD), otherwise "goto 2)"

 The Perl Script



 #!/usr/bin/perl
 #
 #     Copyright (C) 1997 Claus-Justus Heine
 #
 # This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
 # it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
 # the Free Software Foundation; either version 2, or (at your option)
 # any later version.
 #
 # This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
 # but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
 # MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.  See the
 # GNU General Public License for more details.
 #
 # You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
 # along with this program; see the file COPYING.  If not, write to
 # the Free Software Foundation, 675 Mass Ave, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA.
 #
 #   This script implements a simple contents listing for the zftape
 #   package using the MTIOCVOLINFO ioctl.
 #

 $version = <<EOT;
 listtape-1.0 -- a perl script to list the contents of a floppy tape cartridge
 under Linux using the zftape driver

 RCS \$Revision: 1.2 $
 RCS \$Date: 1998/08/30 13:44:03 $
 EOT

 $tapedev = "/dev/tape";
 $usage = <<EOT;
 Usage: listtape [options ...]

 Mandatory or optional arguments to long options are mandatory or optional
 for short options too.

 -f, --file=FILE       Tape device to use. Default is  "/dev/tape".
 -h, --help            Print this help.
 -?                    Same as '-h'.
 --usage           Same as '-h'.
 -V, --version         Print version information.

 Author: Claus-Justus Heine <claus\@momo.math.rwth-aachen.de>
 EOT

 while ($ARGV[0] =~ /^-/) {
 $_ = shift;
 if (/--file/) {$_ = shift; $tapedev = $_; next;}
 if (/-f/) {$_ = shift; $tapedev = $_; next;}
 if (/--help/) { print $usage; exit 0; }
 if (/-h/) { print $usage; exit 0; }
 if (/--usage/) { print $usage; exit 0; }
 if (/-\?/) { print $usage; exit 0; }
 if (/--version/) { print $version; exit 0; }
 if (/-V/) { print $version; exit 0; }
 die $usage;
 }

 &open_tape($tapedev, "status");
 while(<FTMT>)
 {
 $online = 1 if (/.*online.*/);
 }

 if (! $online) { die "No cartridge present.\n"; }
 &mtop($tapedev, "rewind");

 printf "%11s%12s%20s%20s\n",
 "file number", "block size", "volume size", "tape space";

 while (1)
 {
 &open_tape($tapedev, "volinfo");
 while (<FTMT>) {
 if (/^file number\s*=\s*([0-9]*)$/) { $filenumber = $1; }
 if (/^block size\s*=\s*([0-9]*)$/) { $blocksize = $1; }
 if (/^physical space used\s*=\s*([[0-9]*.*)/) { $rawsize = $1; }
 if (/^real size of volume\s*=\s*([[0-9]*.*)/) { $size = $1; }
 }
 close(FTMT);
 if (&mtop($tapedev, "fsf 1") != 0) {
 &mtop($tapedev,"rewind");
 print "\nRemaining space: $rawsize\n";
 print "Tape block size: $blocksize\n";
 exit 0;
 }
 printf "%6d          %5d  %20s%20s\n",
     $filenumber, $blocksize, $size, $rawsize;
 }

 sub mtop
 {
 local ($tape, $operation) = @_;
 local ($exitval);
 system "ftmt -f $tape $operation > /dev/null 2>&1";
 }

 sub open_tape
 {
 local ($tape, $operation) = @_;
 local ($command);

 $command = "ftmt -f " . $tape . " " . $operation . " |";
 open(FTMT, $command) || die "Couldn't open $command -- $!\n";
 }



 The Bash Script



 ______________________________________________________________________

 #! /bin/bash
 #
 #     Copyright (C) 1997 Claus-Justus Heine
 #
 # This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
 # it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
 # the Free Software Foundation; either version 2, or (at your option)
 # any later version.
 #
 # This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
 # but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
 # MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.  See the
 # GNU General Public License for more details.
 #
 # You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
 # along with this program; see the file COPYING.  If not, write to
 # the Free Software Foundation, 675 Mass Ave, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA.
 #
 #   This script implements a simple contents listing for the zftape
 #   package using the MTIOCVOLINFO ioctl.
 #

 #
 # insert better option parsing here
 #
 TAPEDEV=${1-/dev/tape}

 if ! echo $TAPEDEV | grep "/dev/n"
 then
 TAPEDEV=/dev/n$(basename $TAPEDEV)
 fi

 if ! [ -c $TAPEDEV ]
 then
 echo $TAPEDEV is not a character device!  1>&2
 exit 1
 fi

 if ! mt -f $TAPEDEV rewind
 then
 echo Could not rewind $TAPEDEV - no cartridge present?  1>&2
 exit 1
 fi

 echo -e "\nContents of $TAPEDEV:\n"

 printf "%11s%12s%20s%20s\n" "file number" "block size" "volume size" "tape space"

 trap "rm -f /tmp/$0.$$" exit

 while true
 do
 if ! foo=$(mt -f $TAPEDEV volinfo |cut -f 2 -d =)
 then
 echo $TAPEDEV doesn\'t seem to be a floppy tape device 1>&2
 exit 1
 fi
 #
 # "echo foo | read foo" will not work as the "read foo" is executed in
 # another shell.
 #
 echo $foo > /tmp/$0.$$
 read file blksz used usedunit size sizeunit < /tmp/$0.$$
 if ! mt -f $TAPEDEV fsf 1 > /dev/null 2>&1
 then
 echo -e "\nRemaining space: $used $usedunit"
 echo -e "Tape block size: $blksz"
 if ! mt -f $TAPEDEV rewind
 then
     echo Rewind of $TAPEDEV failed 1>&2
     exit 1
 fi
 exit 0
 fi
 printf "%6d          %5d  %20s%20s\n"\
 $file $blksz "$size $sizeunit" "$used $usedunit"
 done
 ______________________________________________________________________



 <answer from Claus Heine>


 12.  FAQ: "Tape and Drivers" related questions !



 12.1.  What are good makers of Travan tapes?


 I was the UNIX Product Manager at Archive Corp (Prior to the
 Conner/Seagate mess) and we performed extensive tests of tape media
 for compatibility certification, including retentivity, flaking and
 length consistancy.  Based on the results of the tests, we selected
 the best of these certified manufacturers' products to private label
 as our own media.  Here is the order in which we selected vendors up
 through 1995 (when I lost contact with the ATI group):


    QIC

       1. 3M (now known as Imation)

       2. QMaxell/Sony (tie)

       3. (BTW - Iomega uses Sony private-labelled media)

    4MM

       1. Fuji

       2. Maxell/Sony (tie - is this a trend?)

    8MM

       1. Fuji/Exabyte - which we believed to be OEM'd Fuji (tie - so
          much for trend!)

       2. Sony

       3. Maxell

    DLT

       1. Maxell

       2. Sony


 Otherwise, we had entries in our search from other vendors which were
 generally a private-labelled version of one of the major labels above.
 The exceptions were Verbatim and DIC.  Both of these manufacturer's
 media had fall-out rates and length discrepancies that were so high
 that we would not certify them and even warned customers about them
 indicating that we could not offer any sort of guarantee that they
 would get a good backup using the media from these manufacturers.

 In addition, since coming to EST, I've found that Verbatim media is
 still not worth the money saved in purchasing it.  We have 11 of their
 TR-Extra and QIC-Extra (QICXL) tapes that were useless after fewer
 than 20 passes each.

 While this is my personal opinion, it is based on over 9 years of
 experience with this very question, I strongly recommend Imation/3M
 media for QIC/Travan user, Fuji media 4MM users, Exabyte/Fuji for 8MM
 and DEC labelled media for DLT users.

 <answer from Tim Jones>


 12.2.  Where can I obtain the QIC standards?


 If you wish to help developing Ftape, or add some utility (e.g. a tape
 formatting program), you will need that appropriate QIC standards.
 The standard(s) to get is: QIC-80, -117, -3010, and 3020.  QIC-117
 describes how commands are sent to the tape drive (including timing
 etc), so you would probably never need it.  QIC-80/3010/3020 describes
 higher level part, such as tape layout, ECC code, standard filesystem.
 You can get the QIC standards from the following address:



      Quarter Inch Cartridge Drive Standards, Inc.
      311 East Carrillo Street
      Santa Barbara, California 93101
      Phone: (805) 963-3853
      Fax:   (805) 962-1541



 Note: They are registered as `Freeman Associates, Inc' in the phone
 book.

 <from the Ftape-Howto>


 12.3.  Is the Iomega Ditto 2GB drive supported?


 Yes, if you are using version ftape-3.x or later of the Ftape drivers
 from the Ftape Home Page or from
 ftp://sunsite.unc.edu/pub/Linux/kernel/tapes.

 <answer from Tim Jones>

 As the Ditto 2GB is a Tr-3 tape (though it can only store 1GB instead
 of the 1.6GB you get with a regular Tr-3 drive) you need an FDC (FDC
 means: Floppy Disk Controller) that is capable of at 1Mbit/sec
 transfer rate. You don't need to worry about this if you have an
 accellerator card (i.e. the Ditto Dash controller). Otherwise try to
 purchase an FDC that claims to be capable of driving 2.88Mb floppies
 because this implies that the FDC is capable of 1Mbit transfer rate.

 Ftape prints the maximum data rate of the FDC to the kernel log files
 like this:

 ftape-ctl.c (ftape_init_drive) - Highest FDC supported data rate: 500 Kbps.



 <answer from Claus Heine>


 12.4.  Is the Iomega Ditto Max drive supported?


 Yes, if you are using version ftape-4.02 or later of the Ftape drivers
 from the Ftape Home Page or from
 ftp://sunsite.unc.edu/pub/Linux/kernel/tapes.

 <answer from Claus Heine>


 12.5.  Is the Iomega Ditto Max Pro drive supported?


 Yes. But if you want to use the 5GB (10GB with compression) cartridges
 you don't need it. With ftape there doesn't seem to be any difference
 between the Ditto Max and the Ditto Max Pro.

 <answer from Claus Heine>


 13.  FAQ: Miscellaneous !



 13.1.  How to subscribe to the Ftape Mailing List?


 You can subscribe to that list by sending mail to


      [email protected]



 with the single line


      subscribe linux-tape



 in its body. Please store the answer you get from majordomo in a safe
 place because it contains instructions how to UNSUBSCRIBE from the
 mailing list.

 <answer from Claus Heine>


 13.2.  How to un-subscribe from the Ftape Mailing List?


 Send mail to


 [email protected]



 with the single line


      unsubscribe linux-tape [email protected]



 where [email protected] has to be replaced by the the email address
 that you used when subscribing to the list. Note that you must have
 received an email with instructions how to unsubscribe from the mail-
 ing list at the time you subscribed to it.

 <answer from Claus Heine>


 13.3.  Links to related information.



 <http://www.uwsg.indiana.edu/usai/library/backups.html>

 More links wanted !!!



 14.  Debugging the ftape  driver



 14.1.  The kernel/ ftape  crashes on me when I do `...' - is that a
 bug?


 No, that is a feature ;-)

 Seriously, reliable software do not crash.  Especially kernels do not
 or rather should not crash.  If the kernel crashes upon you when you
 are running ftape, and you can show that it is ftape that is messing
 things up, regard it as a Bug That Should Be Fixed.  Mail the details
 to the maintainer (<[email protected]>) and to the tape list.



 14.2.  OK, it's a bug ...ehhh... feature - How do I submit a report?


 First, make sure you can reproduce the problem.  Spurious errors are a
 pain in the ass, since they are just about impossible to hunt down :-/
 This is a quick check list:


 o  Kernel version, and patches applied

 o  ftape version

 o  tape drive model / manufacturer

 o  Expansion bus type (EISA, ISA, PCI, or VL-bus)

 o  What you did to expose the problem

 o  What went wrong on your system.

 o  Do not delete the kernel and the ftape.o file. I might want you run
    try some patches out or run a different test on your system.

 Increase the tracing level to 4 or 5 and run the command that caused
 problems again (don't do it if your fear that you loose data or damage
 your hardware, there is absolutely no warranty for neither data loss
 nor hardware damage caused by ftape, remember this). Increasing the
 trace level beyond 5 probably doesn't make any sense as it affects the
 timing of the driver in a way that it doesn't work well any more. Get
 the tracing data from the kernel log or /proc/kmsg, depending on where
 you harvest your error messages.  Try to look at what ftape spews out
 at you.  It may look in-comprehensible to you at first, but you can
 get valuable information from the logfile.  Most messages have a
 function name prepended, to make it easier to locate the problem.
 Look through the source, don't just cry ``WOLF!'', without giving it a
 try.  If your version of the kernel (or ftape for that matter), is
 ``old'', when compared to the newest version of the kernel, try to get
 a newer (or even the newest) kernel and see if the problem goes away
 under the new kernel.  When you post your problem report, include the
 information about ftape version, kernel version, expansion bus type
 (ISA, VL-bus, PCI or EISA), bus speed, floppy controller, and tape
 drive.  State exactly what you did, and what happened on your system.
 Some people have experienced that ftape would not run in a PCI based
 box, but ran flawlessly in a normal ISA based 386DX machine (see
 section ``Getting PCI motherboards to work with <tt/ftape/'' on PCI
 machines above)

 Also, please think of the poor souls who actually pay the their
 Internet access (like me): avoid posting a (huge) log from the ftape
 run, without reason.  Instead, you could describe the problem, and
 offer to send the log to the interested parties.

 Send your bug report to <[email protected]>. You might also
 want to mail the bug to <[email protected]>.



 15.  Contributions


 The following is a list of notable folks that have contributed to
 ftape's HOWTO document.  This is a recent addition added by someone
 coming in midstream.  My sincerest apologies if I've inadvertently
 left someone important off the list. You can view anoterh attempt to
 collect such kind of information at Ftape's Hall of Fame

 Johan De Wit <[email protected]>: The maintainer of the Ftape FAQ.

 Kevin Johnson <[email protected]>: The previous maintainer of the Ftape-
 HOWTO

 Kai Harrekilde-Petersen <[email protected]>: The previous maintainer
 of ftape and the HOWTO.


 Andrew Martin <[email protected]>: Many additions to the
 HOWTO.



 Bas Laarhoven <[email protected]>: The original author of ftape.