2.11BSD/man/cat4/tmscp.0
TMSCP(4) UNIX Programmer's Manual TMSCP(4)
NAME
tmscp - DEC TMSCP magtape interface
SYNOPSIS
/sys/conf/SYSTEM:
NTMSCP 1 # TMSCP controllers
NTMS 1 # TMSCP drives
TMSCP_DEBUG NO # debugging code in in TMSCP drive (EXPENSIVE)
/etc/dtab:
#Name Unit# Addr Vector Br Handler(s) # Comments
tms ? 174500 260 5 tmsintr # tmscp driver
tms ? 164334 0 5 tmsintr # alternate
major device number(s):
raw: 23
block: 12
minor device encoding:
bit: |7 | 6 | 5 | 4 | 3 | 2 | 1 | 0|
-------------------------------
C C X D D N U U
C = Controller # (max of 4 controllers)
D = Density
N = Norewind on close
U = Unit (drive) number (max of 4 drives per controller)
DESCRIPTION
Tape controllers compatible with the DEC Tape Mass Storage
Control Protocol (TMSCP) architecture such as the TU81 and
the TK50 provide a standard tape drive interface as
described in _m_t_i_o(4). The controller communicates with the
host through a packet oriented protocol. Consult the file
<pdp/tmscp.h> for a detailed description of this protocol.
FILES
/dev/MAKEDEV script to create special files
/dev/MAKEDEV.local script to localize special files
The vector specified in /etc/dtab may be given as an expli-
cit value in which case _a_u_t_o_c_o_n_f_i_g(_8) will attempt to allo-
cate the specified vector. The vector may also be (if the
system is at revision level 100 or higher) given as 0 - in
which case _a_u_t_o_c_o_n_f_i_g(_8) will request the kernel to allocate
the next available vector (beginning at 01000 and proceeding
downward) which _a_u_t_o_c_o_n_f_i_g(_8) will initialize.
Printed 11/26/99 December 22, 1995 1
TMSCP(4) UNIX Programmer's Manual TMSCP(4)
Multiple drives on a single controller are supported. Mul-
tiple controllers are also supported.
Density selection is specified by bits 3 and 4 in the minor
device number. A value of 0 requests the lowest density of
a drive and a value of 3 the highest density. Values of 1
and 2 are essentially equivalent (because because TMSCP only
defines values for three densities) and request the middle
density (for tri-density tape drives).
DIAGNOSTICS
tms: !drives. Not enough drives were declared when the ker-
nel was built. The NTMS parameter in the kernel config file
needs to be increased by at least one.
tms%d stepN init failed: sa %x. Step N of the 4 step ini-
tialization sequence has failed.
tms%d: random intr. An unexpected interrupt was received.
This is indicative of some other device using the same
interrupt vector as the TMSCP controller. The interrupt is
ignored.
tms%d Ver %d Mod %d. The version and model number of the
controller are displayed when the controller is initialized.
This is an information message and not an error.
tms%d: state %d. The controller state is not one of the 4
initialization states or the RUN state. This indicates a
serious problem in the driver and possibly the hardware.
tms%d: fatal error %x. The controller detected a ``fatal
error'' in the status returned to the host. The contents of
the status register are displayed.
tms%d init fail. The controller failed to initialize.
Indicative of a hardware problem.
tms%d,%d flush fail. The cache failed to flush during a
close operation. Data loss is possible in this case.
tms%d,%d: sa %x state %d. A fatal error. The controller
will be reset in an attempt to resume operation.
tms ioctl. An invalid internal ioctl function call has been
made. This is a driver bug.
tms%d,%d inv end. An invalid end (completion) code has been
detected. A drive has returned 0 as the opcode originally
issued. This is a hardware problem.
Printed 11/26/99 December 22, 1995 2
TMSCP(4) UNIX Programmer's Manual TMSCP(4)
tms%d,%d bad rsp: %x. An unrecognized response has been
received. This is a driver bug.
tms%d,%d cache lost The cache on the drive has been lost.
Data loss is likely. Usually due to a hardware problem.
The following error is produced when a TMSCP error log
datagram is received:
tms%d,%d dgram fmt=%x evt=%x grp=%x flg=%x pos=%D.
Earlier versions of the driver consumed a noticeable amount
of kernel D-space decoding and pretty printing more detailed
information. This has been removed in favor of a shorter
message. In the future an error log daemon will be written
and the datagrams from the MSCP and TMSCP drivers passed to
it for analysis.
SEE ALSO
mt(1), tar(1), tp(1), mtio(4), tm(4), ts(4), ut(4),
dmesg(8), dtab(5), autoconfig(8)
BUGS
If any non-data error is encountered on non-raw tape, it
refuses to do anything more until closed.
On quad-density tape drives (the Kennedy 9662 for example)
the middle density of 3200bpi is not host selectable (it can
be manually selected from the drive's front panel) because
TMSCP only defines 800, 1600 and 6250bpi.
Printed 11/26/99 December 22, 1995 3