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Date:      Tue, 07 Mar 1995 15:14:43 PST
From:      trost@cloud.rain.com (Bill Trost)
To:        mcquiggi@sfu.ca
Cc:        questions@FreeBSD.org
Subject:   Kernel config for tape drive
Message-ID:  <bill%2B9700.009531@cloud.rain.com>
In-Reply-To: <9503030546.AA19509@malibu.sfu.ca>
References:  <9503030546.AA19509@malibu.sfu.ca>

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Kevin McQuiggin writes:
    I added a line to my config file:	tape    ft0   drive 2
    as indicated in the 1.1 version of the FAQ, recompiled the kernel,
    and after installation, the tape drive is inaccessible.....

    I have only a single floppy drive on the machine....

    Any help would be appreciated. Please don't tell me to upgrade to
    2.0, as I want to wait for at least 2.1 to arrive and stabilize
    before doing that upgrade.
    
Don't worry -- it doesn't work in 2.0 either.   )-:

I'm in much the similar situation (the tape drive is newer, and I'm
running 2.0, but about the same otherwise other differences).  I've
tried all the things you've tried, and more:

  * I bought another floppy disk drive to see if that would make the
    problem go away.  No luck -- but I know where you might be able to
    get a good deal on a 5 1/4" floppy....  (-:

  * I'm spelunked in the kernel.  I can tell you right now that
    you can't use unit 1 for the tape drive, at least in the 2.0
    release -- the code foolishly assumes that, if the unit number is
    less than 2, it's gotta be a disk drive (at least, that's my
    interpretation).  I've tried changing that assumption, and other
    fiddling, to no avail.

  * The closest I've gotten is by turning on the low-level debugging
    code in the floppy driver -- by doing that, I can get the kernel
    probe to acknowledge that the tape drive is there (question: do
    you see a mention of "ft0" when the machine boots up?).  However,
    under those circumstance, I always would get an I/O error when
    actually trying to access the tape drive, and would eventually get
    a panic-less reboot.  My guess is that this slows down the machine
    enough that the tape drive has an opportunity to respond to the
    probe, and I don't know what's happening to the actual I/O
    accesses.

My solution?  I'm going to order a SCSI controller and a SCSI tape
drive. )-:  I haven't gotten any useful responses from this mailing
list, and I really don't have the time (or knowledge, probably), to go
fooling around with the floppy driver while my data sits unbacked-up.
Maybe I'll hang on to the tape drive anyhow, just in case I'm feeling
exceptionally masochistic.



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