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Managing Devices in Oracle® Solaris 11.4

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Updated: November 2020
 
 

Displaying Tape Drive Status

You can use the status option with the mt command to get status information about tape drives. The mt command reports information about any tape drives that are described in the /kernel/drv/st.conf file.

How to Display Tape Drive Status

  1. Ensure that tapes are loaded into the drives.
  2. Type the following command, to check the status of every tape:
    # mt -f /dev/rmt/drive-number status
Example 57  Displaying Tape Drive Status

The following example shows the status for a QIC-150 tape drive (/dev/rmt/0):

$ mt -f /dev/rmt/0 status
Archive QIC-150 tape drive:
sense key(0x0)= No Additional Sense   residual= 0   retries= 0
file no= 0   block no= 0

The following example shows the status for an Exabyte tape drive (/dev/rmt/1):

$ mt -f /dev/rmt/1 status
Exabyte EXB-8200 8mm tape drive:
sense key(0x0)= NO Additional Sense residual= 0  retries= 0
file no= 0   block no= 0

The following example shows a quick way to poll a system and locate all of its tape drives:

$ for drive in 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7
> do
> mt -f /dev/rmt/$drive status
> done
Archive QIC-150 tape drive:
sense key(0x0)= No Additional Sense   residual= 0   retries= 0
file no= 0   block no= 0
/dev/rmt/1: No such file or directory
/dev/rmt/2: No such file or directory
/dev/rmt/3: No such file or directory
/dev/rmt/4: No such file or directory
/dev/rmt/5: No such file or directory
/dev/rmt/6: No such file or directory
/dev/rmt/7: No such file or directory
$