Thursday, September 19, 2024

Tape Drive or CDROM Not Found

Creating a tape drive or cdrom should be simple: run “mkdev tape” or “mkdev cdrom” and answer the questions, relink a new kernel, reboot and it is done. Unfortunately, people seem to have a lot of problems with this.

(For the remainder of this article I’ll be referring only to tape drives. Everything said applies equally to cdroms or indeed any scsi or ide device being added).

Most of the time, the problem is simply that you’ve chosen the wrong scsi id or adaptor. Unfortunately, “hwconfig” happily reports whatever you told “mkdev tape”, whether or not a tape is really there, so this adds to the confusion. YOU CAN’T TRUST “hwconfig”- just because it says a tape is there does not mean that it is.

On modern releases of SCO (5.0.5 and up), “sconf -v” will show the actual scsi devices seen on the bus.

UNTIL SCONF SEES IT, IT DOESN’T EXIST.

Don’t use sconf prior to 5.0.5- it will crash your system.

It’s fine that your scsi controller has a bios scan that shows the tape- that at least means that it is physically attached. But until “sconf -v” can see it, the Unix system does not know that it is there.

If your bios doesn’t see the tape, fix that problem first. If it does, but sconf does not, you probably need a better driver for your scsi controller. It doesn’t matter that your hard drive is on the same controller and that works- if sconf does not list your tape, and it really is attached (for example you can see it in the bios scan), you need a better driver.

If sconf does see it, you want to compare what it says to what “mkdev tape” put into /etc/conf/cf.d/mscsi.

The format is slightly different, but the identical information is reported.

sconf: Type Driver Adaptor Bus Target Lun
mscsi: Driver Type Adaptor Target Lun Bus

For example, here’s a tape drive at id 2 on the second alad adaptor:

(mscsi)
alad	Stp	1	2	0	0
(sconf)
Stp	alad	1	0	2	0

What do you do if sconf tells you something different than what you thought it was when you ran “mkdev tape”?
You don’t need to run it again; simply manually edit /etc/conf/cf.d/mscsi, relink the kernel and reboot.

If the tape is seen, is properly configured but still doesn’t work, you probably have cabling or termination issues: see SCSI.

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A.P. Lawrence provides SCO Unix and Linux consulting services http://www.pcunix.com

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