2.9BSD/usr/man/cat4/hp.4
HP(4) UNIX Programmer's Manual HP(4)
NAME
hp - RP04, RP05, RP06 moving-head disk
DESCRIPTION
Files with minor device numbers 0 through 7 refer to various
portions of drive 0; minor devices 8 through 15 refer to
drive 1, etc. The standard device names begin with ``hp''
followed by the drive number and then a letter a-h for par-
titions 0-7 respectively. The character ? stands here for a
drive number in the range 0-7.
The origin and size of the partitions (in 512-byte sectors)
on each drive are as follows:
Partitions:
disk start length cyls function on drive 0
hp?a 0 9614 0-22 /
hp?b 9614 8779 23-43 swap
hp?c 18392 153406 44-410 /usr (RP04, RP05)
hp?d 171798 168872 411-814 rest of RP06
hp?e 18392 322278 44-814 alternate, RP06
hp?g 0 171798 0-410 whole RP04/5
hp?h 0 322278 0-814 whole RP06
It is unwise for all of these files to be present in one
installation, since there is overlap in addresses and pro-
tection becomes a sticky matter.
The block files access the disk via the system's normal
buffering mechanism and may be read and written without
regard to physical disk records. There is also a `raw'
interface which provides for direct transmission between the
disk and the user's read or write buffer. A single read or
write call results in exactly one I/O operation and there-
fore raw I/O is considerably more efficient when many words
are transmitted. The names of the raw files conventionally
begin with an extra `r.'
In raw I/O counts should be a multiple of 512 bytes (a disk
sector). Likewise _l_s_e_e_k calls should specify a multiple of
512 bytes.
FILES
/dev/hp[0-7][a-h] block files
/dev/rhp[0-7][a-h] raw files
SEE ALSO
dvhp(4), hk(4), hs(4), ml(4), rf(4), rk(4), rl(4), rm(4),
rp(4), rx2(4), xp(4)
DIAGNOSTICS
hp%d%c: hard error bn %d cs2=%b er1=%b. An unrecoverable
Printed 7/31/83 1
HP(4) UNIX Programmer's Manual HP(4)
error occured during transfer of the specified sector of the
specified disk partition. The contents of the two error
registers are also printed in octal and symbolically with
bits decoded. The error was either unrecoverable, or a
large number of retry attempts (including offset positioning
and drive recalibration) could not recover the error.
hp%d: write locked. The write protect switch was set on the
drive when a write was attempted. The write operation is
not recoverable.
hp%d%c: soft ecc bn %d. A recoverable ECC error occurred on
the specified sector of the specified disk partition. This
happens normally a few times a week. If it happens more
frequently than this the sectors where the errors are occur-
ing should be checked to see if certain cylinders on the
pack, spots on the carriage of the drive or heads are indi-
cated.
BUGS
In raw I/O _r_e_a_d and _w_r_i_t_e(2) truncate file offsets to 512-
byte block boundaries, and _w_r_i_t_e scribbles on the tail of
incomplete blocks. Thus, in programs that are likely to
access raw devices, _r_e_a_d, _w_r_i_t_e and _l_s_e_e_k(2) should always
deal in 512-byte multiples.
DEC-standard error logging should be supported.
A program to analyze the logged error information (even in
its present reduced form) is needed.
The partition tables for the file systems should be read
from each pack, as they are never quite what any single
installation would prefer, and this would make packs more
portable.
Printed 7/31/83 2