xenial (1) mt-st.1.gz

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NAME

       mt - control magnetic tape drive operation

SYNOPSIS

       mt [-h] [-f device] operation [count] [arguments...]

DESCRIPTION

       This  manual  page documents the tape control program mt.  mt performs the given operation, which must be
       one of the tape operations listed below, on a tape drive. The commands can also be listed by running  the
       program with the -h option. The version of mt is printed with the -v or --version option. The path of the
       tape device on which to operate can be given with the -f or -t option.  If neither of  those  options  is
       given,  and the environment variable TAPE is set, it is used.  Otherwise, a default device defined in the
       file /usr/include/sys/mtio.h is used (note that the actual path  to  mtio.h  can  vary  per  architecture
       and/or distribution).

       Some  operations optionally take an argument or repeat count, which can be given after the operation name
       and defaults to 1. The postfix k , M , or G can be used to give counts in units of 1024, 1024 * 1024,  or
       1024 * 1024 * 1024, respectively.

       The  available  operations  are listed below.  Unique abbreviations are accepted.  Not all operations are
       available on all systems, or work on all types of tape drives.

       fsf    Forward space count files.  The tape is positioned on the first block of the next file.

       fsfm   Forward space count files.  The tape is positioned on the last block of the previous file.

       bsf    Backward space count files.  The tape is positioned on the last block of the previous file.

       bsfm   Backward space count files.  The tape is positioned on the first block of the next file.

       asf    The tape is positioned at the beginning of the count file. Positioning is done by first  rewinding
              the tape and then spacing forward over count filemarks.

       fsr    Forward space count records.

       bsr    Backward space count records.

       fss    (SCSI tapes) Forward space count setmarks.

       bss    (SCSI tapes) Backward space count setmarks.

       eod, seod
              Space  to  end  of  valid data.  Used on streamer tape drives to append data to the logical end of
              tape.

       rewind Rewind the tape.

       offline, rewoffl, eject
              Rewind the tape and, if applicable, unload the tape.

       retension
              Rewind the tape, then wind it to the end of the reel, then rewind it again.

       weof, eof
              Write count EOF marks at current position.

       wset   (SCSI tapes) Write count setmarks at current position (only SCSI tape).

       erase  Erase the tape. Note that this is a long erase, which on modern  (high-capacity)  tapes  can  take
              many hours, and which usually can't be aborted.

       status Print  status  information  about  the  tape unit. (If the density code is "no translation" in the
              status output, this does not affect working of the tape drive.)

       seek   (SCSI tapes) Seek to the count block on the tape.  This operation is available  on  some  Tandberg
              and  Wangtek  streamers  and  some SCSI-2 tape drives. The block address should be obtained from a
              tell call earlier.

       tell   (SCSI tapes) Tell the current block on tape.  This operation is available  on  some  Tandberg  and
              Wangtek streamers and some SCSI-2 tape drives.

       setpartition
              (SCSI  tapes) Switch to the partition determined by count.  The default data partition of the tape
              is numbered zero. Switching partition is available only if enabled  for  the  device,  the  device
              supports multiple partitions, and the tape is formatted with multiple partitions.

       partseek
              (SCSI  tapes) The tape position is set to block count in the partition given by the argument after
              count. The default partition is zero.

       mkpartition
              (SCSI tapes) Format the tape with one (count is zero) or two partitions (count gives the  size  of
              the  second  partition in megabytes). The tape drive must be able to format partitioned tapes with
              initiator-specified partition size and partition support must be enabled for the drive.

       load   (SCSI tapes) Send the load command to the tape drive. The drives usually load the tape when a  new
              cartridge  is inserted. The argument count can usually be omitted. Some HP changers load tape n if
              the count 10000 + n is given (a special funtion in the Linux st driver).

       lock   (SCSI tapes) Lock the tape drive door.

       unlock (SCSI tapes) Unlock the tape drive door.

       setblk (SCSI tapes) Set the block size of the drive to count bytes per record.

       setdensity
              (SCSI tapes) Set the tape density code to count.  The proper codes to use with each  drive  should
              be looked up from the drive documentation.

       densities
              (SCSI tapes) Write explanation of some common density codes to standard output.

       drvbuffer
              (SCSI  tapes) Set the tape drive buffer code to number.  The proper value for unbuffered operation
              is zero and "normal" buffered operation one. The meanings of other values  can  be  found  in  the
              drive documentation or, in the case of a SCSI-2 drive, from the SCSI-2 standard.

       compression
              (SCSI  tapes)  The  compression within the drive can be switched on or off using the MTCOMPRESSION
              ioctl. Note that this method  is  not  supported  by  all  drives  implementing  compression.  For
              instance, the Exabyte 8 mm drives use density codes to select compression.

       stoptions
              (SCSI  tapes)  Set  the driver options bits for the device to the defined values. Allowed only for
              the  superuser.  The  bits  can  be  set  either  by  ORing  the  option  bits   from   the   file
              /usr/include/linux/mtio.h  to  count,  or by using the following keywords (as many keywords can be
              used on the same line as necessary, unambiguous abbreviations allowed):

              buffer-writes  buffered writes enabled

              async-writes   asynchronous writes enabled

              read-ahead     read-ahead for fixed block size

              debug          debugging (if compiled into driver)

              two-fms        write two filemarks when file closed

              fast-eod       space directly to eod (and lose file number)

              no-wait        don't wait until rewind, etc. complete

              auto-lock      automatically lock/unlock drive door

              def-writes     the block size and density are for writes

              can-bsr        drive can space backwards as well

              no-blklimits   drive doesn't support read block limits

              can-partitions drive can handle partitioned tapes

              scsi2logical   seek and tell use SCSI-2  logical  block  addresses  instead  of  device  dependent
                             addresses

              sili           Set  the SILI bit is when reading in variable block mode. This may speed up reading
                             blocks shorter than the read byte count. Set this option only if you know that  the
                             drive  supports  SILI  and  the HBA reliably returns transfer residual byte counts.
                             Requires kernel version >= 2.6.26.

              sysv           enable the System V semantics

       stsetoptions
              (SCSI tapes) Set selected driver options bits.  The methods to specify the bits to set  are  given
              above in the description of stoptions.  Allowed only for the superuser.

       stclearoptions
              (SCSI  tapes)  Clear  selected  driver  option bits.  The methods to specify the bits to clear are
              given above in description of stoptions.  Allowed only for the superuser.

       stshowoptions
              (SCSI tapes) Print the currently enabled options for the device. Requires kernel version >= 2.6.26
              and sysfs must be mounted at /sys.

       stwrthreshold
              (SCSI  tapes) The write threshold for the tape device is set to count kilobytes. The value must be
              smaller than or equal to the driver buffer size. Allowed only for the superuser.

       defblksize
              (SCSI tapes) Set the default block size of the device to count bytes. The value  -1  disables  the
              default  block  size.   The  block  size  set  by setblk overrides the default until a new tape is
              inserted.  Allowed only for the superuser.

       defdensity
              (SCSI tapes) Set the default density code. The value -1 disables the default density. The  density
              set  by  setdensity  overrides  the  default  until  a  new tape is inserted. Allowed only for the
              superuser.

       defdrvbuffer
              (SCSI tapes) Set the default drive buffer code. The value -1 disables  the  default  drive  buffer
              code.  The  drive buffer code set by drvbuffer overrides the default until a new tape is inserted.
              Allowed only for the superuser.

       defcompression
              (SCSI tapes) Set the default compression state. The value -1 disables the default compression. The
              compression  state  set by compression overrides the default until a new tape is inserted. Allowed
              only for the superuser.

       sttimeout
              sets the normal timeout for the device. The value is  given  in  seconds.  Allowed  only  for  the
              superuser.

       stlongtimeout
              sets  the  long  timeout  for  the  device.  The  value  is given in seconds. Allowed only for the
              superuser.

       stsetcln
              set the cleaning request interpretation parameters.

       mt exits with a status of 0 if the operation succeeded, 1 if the  operation  or  device  name  given  was
       invalid, or 2 if the operation failed.

AUTHOR

       The program is written by Kai Makisara <Kai.Makisara@kolumbus.fi>.

       The  program  and  the  manual  page are copyrighted by Kai Makisara, 1998-2008.  They can be distributed
       according to the GNU Copyleft.

SEE ALSO

       st(4)

                                                   April 2008                                              MT(1)