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Date:      Sat, 24 May 1997 17:03:45 +0930 (CST)
From:      Michael Smith <msmith@atrad.adelaide.edu.au>
To:        brandon@cold.org (Brandon Gillespie)
Cc:        freebsd-hardware@FreeBSD.ORG
Subject:   Re: Wang DAT SCSI drive woes
Message-ID:  <199705240733.RAA05396@genesis.atrad.adelaide.edu.au>
In-Reply-To: <Pine.NEB.3.95.970523101432.6847E-100000@cold.org> from Brandon Gillespie at "May 23, 97 10:15:19 am"

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Brandon Gillespie stands accused of saying:
> 
> Has anybody ever wrestled with a Wang DAT SCSI drive?  I just dropped one
> in my FreeBSD box.  I have used Exabytes before, but never a Wang DAT.
> This one is on SCSI ID 6, and shows up in the boot probes as:

Yeah, I have a couple.

> aic0 at 0x340-0x35f irq 11 on isa
> aic0 waiting for scsi devices to settle
> (aic0:6:0): "WangDAT Model 2600 01.2" type 1 removable SCSI 2
> st0(aic0:6:0): Sequential-Access density code 0x93, 512-byte blocks,
>                write-enabled

Aha, so what's the problem?

> Now.. the controller is an old Adaptec 1524, I would think it is to fault,
> but it hasn't given me problems with any other SCSI devices, such as
> CD-ROMS, SCSI disks and Exabyte tape drives.

The 152x controllers aren't the greatest, but they seem to work OK.

> Or at the lease, help me decrypt what these dip-switches are for?

Here is some mail I received when I was setting mine up :

>From rose@locus.dml.com Thu Oct 17 16:03:09 1996
Received: from locus.dml.com [198.49.1.49] by genesis.atrad.adelaide.edu.au (8.6.12/8.6.9) with ESMTP id QAA13046 for <msmith@atrad.adelaide.edu.au>; Thu, 17 Oct 1996 16:02:54 +0930
Received: from localhost (rose@localhost) by locus.dml.com (8.6.12/8.6.12) with SMTP id XAA05137 for <msmith@atrad.adelaide.edu.au>; Wed, 16 Oct 1996 23:29:07 -0700
Date: Wed, 16 Oct 1996 23:29:07 -0700 (PDT)
From: Stephen Rose <rose@dml.com>
To: Michael Smith <msmith@atrad.adelaide.edu.au>
Subject: Re: WangDAT 2x00 units...
Message-ID: <Pine.NEB.3.94.961016222405.3330A-100000@locus.dml.com>
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: TEXT/PLAIN; charset=US-ASCII
Status: RO

I've had one of these for a couple of years.  I'm happy with it.  I can't
say that I've used it heavily, though.  I use it for the very occasional
backup and transfering bits from home to work and back.  I have to use
uncompressed mode for that because it is incompatible with most other
drives in compressed mode, as you pointed out.  Here is how ncrcontrol
sees it:

T:L  Vendor   Device           Rev  Speed   Max Wide Tags
6:0  WangDAT  Model 2600       01.7   5.0  10.0   8    -

The label on the drive says that it's a model 2000.  The firmware for the
2600 and the 2000 is probably the same.  Here is a table the manual has:

Model		Format		Length		Interface
------------------------------------------------------------
1300		DDS		60m		Single-ended
1300XL		DDS		60,90m		Single-ended
1300DF		DDS		60m		Differential
1300DL		DDS		60,90m		Differential
2600		WGC,DDS		60m		Single-ended
2000		WGC,DDS		60,90m		Single-ended

I think WGC is the stack compression capability.  Here are the dip
switches:

Number	Function		Default
---------------------------------------
sw1-1	Buffered Mode		off
sw1-2	Default tape format	on
sw1-3	scsi-1/scsi-2 protocol	off
sw1-4	cassette load/unload	off
sw1-5	scsi bus parity enable	on
sw1-6	scsi bus id lsb		off
sw1-7	scsi bus id		off
sw1-8	scsi bus id msb		off

I think I've set sw1-2 to off to be compatible with other drives, although
compression can be enabled in software.  Sw1-3 is on because I wanted it
to be scsi-2.  I think I set sw1-4 on as well.  Setting sw-1 to off lets
the buffered mode be set by software.  I've left that alone.

JP-1 (behind the termination resistor sockets) is for enabling termination
power on the scsi bus.

Here is a table about sw1-4:

					Response to test unit ready
					or medium access command

	Condition	Amber LED    sw1-4 on           sw1-4 off
------------------------------------------------------------------------
				     check condition    check condition
1	Cassette	off	     sense: not ready   sense: not ready
	out			     medium not pres.   medium not pres.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
				     check condition    no check condition
2	insert		start	     sense: not ready   command accepted
	cassette	flashing     coming ready
------------------------------------------------------------------------
				     check condition    no check condition
3	cassette	flashing     sense: not ready   command accepted
	loading			     coming ready
------------------------------------------------------------------------
				     no check condition no check condition
4	cassette	steady on    command accepted   command accepted
	loaded
------------------------------------------------------------------------
				     check condition    check condition
5	cassette	flashing     sense: not ready   sense: not ready
	unloading		     medium not pres.   medium not pres.
------------------------------------------------------------------------

Here's another table:

LED			Color	State	  Meaning
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
Left			green	on	  drive active on scsi bus
(Activity/Fault)	-------------------------------------------------
			red	flashing  drive fault condition exists
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
				flashing  loading or unloading cassette
Right			amber	-----------------------------------------
(Cassette/Format) 		on	  Cassette in place, format: DDS
			-------------------------------------------------
			green	on	  Cassette in place, format: Comp.
-------------------------------------------------------------------------

It understands the usual cleaning cassette sort of thing, of course.  The
only other interesting thing in the manual is something called power
eject.  Holding the eject button in for 10 seconds causes a forced eject
and a drive reset.  Kind of a last resort thing. 

I haven't figured out how to get it to write a tape in the other format
once it writes a tape in one format.  I'd like to be able to write a tape
in uncompressed format, if I want to, after once writing it in compressed
format.  It seems to insist on mounting the tape in compressed format if
is sees that format.  If you figure out how to do that, I'd like to know.

Hope some of this is new.

Steve Rose




> -Brandon Gillespie
> 
> 
> 


-- 
]] Mike Smith, Software Engineer        msmith@gsoft.com.au             [[
]] Genesis Software                     genesis@gsoft.com.au            [[
]] High-speed data acquisition and      (GSM mobile)     0411-222-496   [[
]] realtime instrument control.         (ph)          +61-8-8267-3493   [[
]] Unix hardware collector.             "Where are your PEZ?" The Tick  [[



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