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/linux-6.15/Documentation/scsi/
H A Dst.rst18 to any specific tape drive. The tape parameters can be specified with
31 beginning of the tape. The second method is applicable if the tape
35 the tape is rewritten from the beginning (or a new tape is written
163 tape position the user expects.
219 not all data made it to tape.
349 tape drive if this is non-zero
421 wait until data is on tape)
425 Rewind tape.
431 Re-tension tape.
466 next tape operation. The block at which the tape is positioned
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H A Dscsi.rst30 tape driver [1]_ (st.o) and SCSI generics driver (sg.o) represent the upper
32 controlled. You can for example load the tape driver to use the tape drive,
43 .. [1] There is a variant of the st driver for controlling OnStream tape
H A Dhpsa.rst11 driver (for logical drives) AND a SCSI driver (for tape drives). This
57 (e.g. hot-plugged tape drives, or newly configured or deleted logical drives,
62 tape drives, or entire storage boxes containing pre-configured logical drives.
H A Dscsi-parameters.rst104 st= [HW,SCSI] SCSI tape parameters (buffers, etc.)
H A Dscsi-changer.rst24 later may be anything, a MOD, a CD-ROM, a tape or whatever. For the
71 Grundig. I got some reports telling it works ok with tape autoloaders
H A Dscsi-generic.rst12 drivers along with sd, st and sr (disk, tape and CD-ROM respectively). Sg
H A DChangeLog.megaraid_sas304 the tape device, set the pthru timeout to the os layer timeout value.
/linux-6.15/Documentation/ABI/testing/
H A Dsysfs-class-scsi_tape17 to and from the tape drive to complete. This includes all
18 reads, writes, and other SCSI commands issued to the tape
19 drive. An example of other SCSI commands would be tape
20 movement such as a rewind when a rewind tape device is
33 The number of I/O requests issued to the tape drive other
43 Shows the total number of bytes requested from the tape drive.
44 This value is presented in bytes because tape drives support
54 Shows the total number of read requests issued to the tape
74 Shows the total number of bytes written to the tape drive.
75 This value is presented in bytes because tape drives support
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/linux-6.15/drivers/s390/char/
H A DMakefile40 tape-$(CONFIG_PROC_FS) += tape_proc.o
41 tape-objs := tape_core.o tape_std.o tape_char.o $(tape-y)
42 obj-$(CONFIG_S390_TAPE) += tape.o tape_class.o
H A DKconfig109 prompt "S/390 tape device support"
112 Select this option if you want to access channel-attached tape
115 least one of the tape interface options and one of the tape
116 hardware options in order to access a tape device.
121 comment "S/390 tape hardware support"
126 prompt "Support for 3480/3490 tape hardware"
130 tape subsystems and 100% compatibles.
135 prompt "Support for 3590 tape hardware"
139 tape subsystems and 100% compatibles.
/linux-6.15/Documentation/admin-guide/blockdev/
H A Dparide.rst13 CD-ROM, LS-120 and tape drives use the parallel port to connect to their
25 controller like an NCR 5380. The "ditto" family of external tape
27 which is then connected to a floppy-tape mechanism. The vast majority
37 devices. It does not cover parallel port SCSI devices, "ditto" tape
44 - MicroSolutions backpack 8000t tape drive
50 - Hewlett-Packard 5GB and 8GB tape drives
109 MicroSolutions 8000t tape bpck
/linux-6.15/Documentation/admin-guide/
H A Ddevices.txt211 9 char SCSI tape devices
212 0 = /dev/st0 First SCSI tape, mode 0
213 1 = /dev/st1 Second SCSI tape, mode 0
215 32 = /dev/st0l First SCSI tape, mode 1
398 12 char QIC-02 tape
573 27 char QIC-117 tape
764 37 char IDE tape
765 0 = /dev/ht0 First IDE tape
766 1 = /dev/ht1 Second IDE tape
2762 206 char OnStream SC-x0 tape devices
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H A Ddevices.rst113 /dev/tape tape device symbolic Current tape device
127 For SCSI devices, ``/dev/tape`` and ``/dev/cdrom`` should point to the
H A Dinitrd.rst284 distribution media (e.g. CD-ROM, network, tape, ...). This can be
/linux-6.15/arch/parisc/
H A Ddefpalo.conf6 --init-tape=lifimage
/linux-6.15/drivers/scsi/
H A Dst.c4224 struct st_modedef *STm = &(tape->modes[mode]); in create_one_cdev()
4226 int dev_num = tape->index; in create_one_cdev()
4250 tape->name, st_formats[i]); in create_one_cdev()
4271 static int create_cdevs(struct scsi_tape *tape) in create_cdevs() argument
4275 error = create_one_cdev(tape, mode, 0); in create_cdevs()
4278 error = create_one_cdev(tape, mode, 1); in create_cdevs()
4284 &tape->modes[0].devs[0]->kobj, "tape"); in create_cdevs()
4287 static void remove_cdevs(struct scsi_tape *tape) in remove_cdevs() argument
4385 STm->tape = tpnt; in st_probe()
4682 struct scsi_tape *STp = STm->tape; in options_show()
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H A Dst.h69 struct scsi_tape *tape; member
H A DKconfig29 If you want to use a SCSI hard disk, SCSI tape drive, SCSI CD-ROM or
79 comment "SCSI support type (disk, tape, CD-ROM)"
104 tristate "SCSI tape support"
107 If you want to use a SCSI tape drive under Linux, say Y and read the
173 tape libraries and MOD/CDROM jukeboxes. *Real* jukeboxes, you
/linux-6.15/include/acpi/
H A Dacbuffer.h37 u32 tape; member
/linux-6.15/drivers/usb/storage/
H A DKconfig14 floppy drives, USB hard disks, USB tape drives, USB CD-ROMs,
/linux-6.15/Documentation/arch/m68k/
H A Dkernel-options.rst292 Sets several parameters of the SCSI tape driver. <buffer_size> is
293 the number of 512-byte buffers reserved for tape operations for each
295 to start an actual write operation to the tape. Maximum value is the
297 buffers allocated for all tape devices.
/linux-6.15/Documentation/driver-api/
H A Dscsi.rst16 peripherals (disk drives, tape drives, modems, printers, scanners,
/linux-6.15/Documentation/userspace-api/fwctl/
H A Dfwctl.rst14 reaction to Moore's Law where a chip tape out is now highly expensive, and the
/linux-6.15/drivers/ata/
H A DKconfig21 If you want to use an ATA hard disk, ATA tape drive, ATA CD-ROM or
28 'SCSI disk support', 'SCSI tape support', or
/linux-6.15/Documentation/arch/s390/
H A Dvfio-ccw.rst54 This includes devices that don't have a virtio counterpart (e.g. tape

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